Category Archives: film

I was very fond of the Ado Kyrou books

Eros in the Cinema (1966) – Raymond Durgnat [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]

In a 1977 interview Durgnat said about Kyrou: “I didn’t read very much film criticism until I started teaching film regularly around 1964! There wasn’t much to read. I was very fond of the Ado Kyrou books.” If Raymond Durgnat can be compared to some of the more exciting French film critics such as Ado Kyrou, his publishing house Calder and Boyars can be compared to that of Eric Losfeld’s. [Jan 2007]

Influences: There are various people whom I read with interest because, whether I agree with them or not, there’s a genuine person speaking from a calibre of experience, not an automatic scanning mechanism. I’m thinking of Pauline Kael, who I rarely agree with; of Robin Wood, who I sometimes agree with; of Manny Farber. And Parker Tyler. At the other extreme, I’m very interested in certain theorists, particularly Jean Mitry and Edgar Morin. –Raymond Durgnat in a 1977 interview.

Some seventies films

El Topo (1970) – Alexandro Jodorowsky [Amazon.com]

Performance (1970) – Nicolas Roeg, Donald Cammell [Amazon.com]

A Clockwork Orange (1971) – Stanley Kubrick

Deep Throat (1972) – Gerard Damiano [Amazon.uk]

Last Tango in Paris (1972) – Bernardo Bertolucci [Amazon.com]

La Grande Bouffe (1973) – Marco Ferreri [Amazon.com]

Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon (1973) [Amazon.com]

The Night Porter (1974) – Liliana Cavani

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) – Tobe Hooper [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]

Les Valseuses/Going Places (1974) Bertrand Blier [Amazon.com]

Jaws (1975) – Steven Spielberg [Amazon.com]

Je t’aime, moi non plus (1976) – Serge Gainsbourg

Ai No Corrida/In the Realm of the Senses (1976) – Nagisa Oshima [Amazon.com]

Taxi Driver (1976) – Martin Scorsese [Amazon.com]

Isabelle Adjani and Roman Polanski watching a kung fu film in Le Locataire
Le Locataire/The Tenant (1976) – Roman Polanski [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]

Eraserhead (1977) – David Lynch [Amazon UK]

Una Giornata particolare/A Special Day (1977) – Ettore Scola [Amazon.com]

John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever (1977) [Amazon.com]

Interiors (1978) – Woody Allen [Amazon.com]

Donald Sutherland in Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) [Amazon.com]

The Brood (1979)- David Cronenberg [Amazon.com]

Buffet Froid (1979) – Bertrand Blier [Amazon.com]

By year: 1970 film1971 film1972 film1973 film1974 film1975 film1976 film1977 film1978 film1979 film

Title pages: Performance (1970)Women In Love (1970)El Topo (1970)Five Easy Pieces (1970)Zabriskie Point (1970)A Clockwork Orange (1971)Straw Dogs (1971) – Last Tango in Paris (1972)Deep Throat (1972) La Grande Bouffe (1973) La Maîtresse (1973)The Night Porter (1974)Ilsa – She Wolf of the SS (1974)The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)Les Valseuses (1974)Jaws (1975)The Story of O (1975)The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)In the Realm of the Senses (1976)Taxi Driver (1976)Eraserhead (1977)Pretty Baby (1978)Caligula (1979)The Brood (1979)

 

Of human hunting

The Most Dangerous Game (1932)

The French title to the film adaptation was Les Chasses du comte Zaroff , as depicted here on the cover of French magazine Midi- Minuit Fantastique, issue 6 of June 1963

Excerpt from the story, where the protagonist finds out what general Zaroff actually means:

“I wanted the ideal animal to hunt,” explained the general. “So I said, `What are the attributes of an ideal quarry?’ And the answer was, of course, `It must have courage, cunning, and, above all, it must be able to reason.”‘

“But no animal can reason,” objected Rainsford.

“My dear fellow,” said the general, “there is one that can.”

“But you can’t mean–” gasped Rainsford.

“And why not?”

“I can’t believe you are serious, General Zaroff. This is a grisly joke.”

“Why should I not be serious? I am speaking of hunting.”

  —The Most Dangerous Game (1924) is a famous short story by Richard Connell

 

See also: human hunting

I can’t see Borges yet

That Donald Cammell has been influenced by Borges may be further illustrated by two more examples. His 1977 film Demon Seed – a visionary but unsettling work where an AI named Proteus attempts to conceive a child with a human woman – contains a scene where a programmer discusses the paradox of Shi Huang Ti, as related by Borges in The Wall and the Books. The second example is more grim, as it involves Cammell’s suicide. After shooting himself in the head with a shotgun, he remarked to his wife that he “couldn’t see Borges yet.” He died a few moments later, with the ambulance on its way to his home. —themodernworld.com

Borges and film (also at themodernworld)

Highest rated films based on stories by Borges (IMDb)

Introducing ‘The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review’

Marquis (1989) – Henri Xhonneux [Amazon.com]

Last week I found out that my local library owns a copy of Roland Topor and Henri Xhonneux’s 1989 animation film Marquis. This is a film I had wanted to watch for some time. I can’t remember exactly where or how I found out about it, since there is not much info available on the internet. Which brings me to the site I want to introduce: ‘The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review’ written by Richard Scheib, 3,500 pages of reviews and film criticism about which the author says:

Fantastic Cinema is an umbrella label that covers material of great diversity. Here you will find coverage of films as far apart as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Bambi [a five star film, according to Scheib], of directors that range from Ingmar Bergman to Edward D. Wood Jr – all are represented here and each discussed in terms of their own merits. Fantastic Cinema is not always easy to define in terms of thematic boundaries and a deliberately broad interpretation of what constitutes genre material has been taken in the hope that it will provide interesting discussion.

On Richard’s site you can read a plot synopsis and appreciation of Marquis.

Richard Scheib apparently lives in New Zealand (re website address), but other than that I can’t find much about him. His site has been online for several years, and is still updated regularly. He’s been writing film reviews at least since 1998, here is his IMDB rec.arts.movies.reviews profile page.

Richard, I have a question for you. would you please start a blog and tell us what you’re watching?

See also: fantastic filmSF filmshorror films

P.S. Marquis features extensive conversations of Sade talking to his genital (and the genital talking back), other fictions which employ the trope of the talking body parts are  Naked Lunch (1959) – William S. Burroughs and the The Indiscreet Jewels (1748) – Denis Diderot.

What makes a novel unfilmable?

 

Hollywood occasionally attempts to turn supposedly ‘unfilmable’ novels into blockbusters. The Hours, Fight Club, American Psycho, and even Adaptation, were all based on what were said to be unfilmable books; although all were adapted into critically-acclaimed films.

Greencine reports on a flurry of posts relating to the supposed unfilmability of certain novels, some of them prompted by the release of Tom Tykwer’s 2006 Perfume:

There’s Will Gore [With the recent arrival of ‘Perfume: The Story of a Murderer’ in cinemas, perhaps the myth of the ‘unfilmable’ novel can finally be laid to rest] on the concept of the “unfilmable novel” and “The Unfilmables: A List of the Hardest Novels to Film” at Screenhead [including James Joyce’s Ulysses, Kurt Vonnegut’s Cat’s Cradle, John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces and J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye].

In 2005 John Patterson already reported on film adaptations of ‘unwieldy’ novels in the Guardian:

“There is,” Norman Mailer once wrote, “a particular type of really bad novel that makes for a really great motion picture.” He might have been referring to such superselling potboilers as Mario Puzo’s The Godfather or Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With The Wind or, indeed, any number of middlebrow literary atrocities whose cinematic adaptations have entirely transcended their trashy sources.

In answer to my question ‘What makes a novel unfilmable?’, if I had to make a checklist of what makes novels unfilmable:

  1. plotlessness
  2. philosophical introspection (can be solved with voice-over)
  3. experimental fiction
  4. …………….

More on this later… In the meantime, if you feel like completing the list, please be my guest.

P. S. 1: now is a good time to reread Fuchsia’s comment on the ‘Nature of the 20th century reading experience’ where I asked: can one measure a book’s success by counting the number of film adaptations?

P. S. 2: My entry in the top ten of unfilmable novels:

  1. Time’s Arrow: Or the Nature of the Offense (1991)
  2. Do please submit your candidates in the comments …

P. S. 3: And maybe one last question: which films would resist successful novelization?

Carlo Ponti (1912 – 2007)

Robert Monell reports that the long lived Italian film producer Carlo Ponti has died.

A silent partner on the international coproduction deal which financed Jess Franco’s Venus in Furs (the party scene was filmed in one of his villas) Ponti produced over 150 films since the 1940s directed by such cinema luminaries as Vittorio De Sica, Antonioni (Blow-Up, Zabriskie Point), Fellini (La Strada), David Lean (Dr. Zhivago), Godard, Ettore Scola (Ugly, Dirty and Bad) and many others.

He will probably be most remembered as the man who discovered and married Sophia Loren.

The notion of a canon is 20th-century heresy

Via Greencine comes this introductory chapter, of an abandoned book by Paul Schrader on the notion of a film canon:

The notion of a canon, any canon—literary, musical, painting—is 20th-century heresy. A film canon is particularly problematic because the demise of the literary canon coincides, not coincidentally, with the advent and rise of moving pictures. There is much debate about the canons but no agreement. Not only is there no agreement about what a canon should include, there’s no agreement about whether there should be canons at all. Or, if there is agreement, it is this: canons are bad—elitist, sexist, racist, outmoded, and politically incorrect.

Yet de facto film canons exist—in abundance. They exist in college curriculums, they exist in yearly 10-best lists, they exist in best-of-all-time lists of every sort. Canon formation has become the equivalent of 19th-century anti-sodomy laws: repudiated in principle, performed in practice. Canons exist because they serve a function; they are needed. And the need increases with each new wave of films. What I propose is to go back in order to go forward. To examine the history of canon formation, cherry-pick the criteria that best apply to film, and select a list of films that meet the highest criteria.

The model, of course, is Harold Bloom’s 1994 bestseller, The Western Canon. Mustering a mountain of hubris and a lifetime of close reading, Bloom proposed a canon of Western literature: books and authors who meet the highest “artistic criteria.” The Western Canon is also a screed against “the cultural politics, both of the Left and the Right, that are destroying criticism and consequently may destroy literature itself.” These cultural politicians, whom Bloom dubs “The School of Resentment,” count among their number Feminists, Marxists, Afrocentrists, New Historicists, Lacanians, Deconstructionists, and Semioticians (Bloom doesn’t flinch from making enemies). —Filmlinc

An online listing of Schrader’s 60 films can be read on Jeffrey M. Anderson’s website Cinematical.

More on Schrader’s canon by Donato Totaro here.

after repeated scans of the list I became less shocked at what was missing and began to appreciate what was there. Like the often overlooked Donald Cammell/Nicolas Roeg film Performance. I began to smile and take perverse pleasure at the quirks and oddities of Schrader’s canon. For example, while excluding Eisenstein because his films tell us nothing about “what it means to be human or, to put it in grand terms, ennoble the soul,” he excludes such luminous humanists as Roberto Rossellini, Vittorio De Sica, and all of neo-realism, while including such Italian films as Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in the West, one of the most cynical and nihilistic westerns ever made (but which I thought was one of Schrader’s most inspired selections), The Conformist, Bernardo Bertolucci’s bleak, terrifying account of Italian Fascism, and La Notte, Michelangelo Antonioni’s paean to emotional fragility and human alienation amid Italian modernity (and by far the most pessimistic of Antonioni’s alienation tetralogy). I wondered how he could insist that the bar be raised as high as possible (“The higher the better”), and then include The Big Lebowski at number 40! While disappointed that there was not one horror film in the canon, from someone who has directed two (The Cat People, Dominion: Prequel to The Exorcist), I was surprised to find out that there are five westerns in his canon. With the inherent possibility of such contradiction and inconsistency, it became evident that canon formation is not for the feint of heart. Schrader should be applauded for providing a reference point for further generations to contest. After all, what type of a canon would it be if it did not? –Donato Totaro

Introducing Esotika Erotica Psychotica

andreyiskanov.jpg

Visions of Suffering (2006) – Andrey Iskanov

ESOTIKA EROTICA PSYCHOTICA is a blog by Mike who decribes it in his own words as a blog about “Sex, art, horror and experimentation in world film.”

Every film includes a review and a generous amount of photos.

The title is inspired by the Italian title of Radley Metzger’s The Lickerish Quartet: Esotika Erotika Psicotika.

Previous entries include:

And his blogroll features:

I’m looking forward to reading more, not in the least because I’ve never heard of the films he mentions. It looks like Mike is discovering the cult hits and sleepers of the coming decades.

Contemplative Cinema Blog-a-Thon

Today marks the beginning of the Contemplative Cinema Blog-a-Thon, hosted by Harry Tuttle at Unspoken Cinema.

“Contemplative Cinema” is defined as “the kind that rejects conventional narration to develop almost essentially through minimalistic visual language and atmosphere, without the help of music, dialogue, melodrama, action-montage, and star system.” Though the Blog-a-Thon runs throughout January, the entries are already gathering nicely, and even better, IMHO, many of the voices are entirely new to me.

Bonus for French speakers: A concurrent discussion, “Cinéma Contemplatif?,” is rolling along in Le Forum des Cahiers du Cinéma. –via Greencine