Only at times like this, when viewing clips of what looks to be an exceptional film, Elem Klimov‘s Agony about the life of Rasputin, see previous post[1], discovered via one of my new facebook friendships, do we realize what utter tripe we are usually watching. The score by Alfred Schnittke is half of the attraction of this film.
Category Archives: film
Happy birthday Radley Metzger!
Unidentified photo of Radley Metzger
Radley Metzger, American filmmaker, distributor and producer turns 80 today.
If all roads lead to Rome, Metzger‘s birthday leads to The Image, one of the sexiest films of the 1970s.
She lifts her skirt for her mistress.
The Image / The Punishment of Anne (1975) – Radley Metzger [Amazon.com] [FR] [DE] [UK]
The Image is a 1975 film directed by Radley Metzger. The film is based upon the 1956 French novel L’Image, written by Catherine Robbe-Grillet, wife of Alain Robbe-Grillet.
The story of Jean (played by Carl Parker), a writer who meets an old friend, Claire (Marilyn Roberts), at a party and is soon drawn into her world of sadomasochism along with her slave, Anne (Mary Mendum, aka Rebecca Brooke, and Metzger’s girlfriend at the time).
Watch out for the fountain scene if you ever get to see this gem, it makes very clever Freudian use of a free Parisian spectacle.
The film is World Cinema Classic #80.
Egon Schiele, Jane Birkin and Brian Eno, or a cult item if there ever was one
Egon Schiele Excess & Punishment
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmOFvKmivxU&]
From the film “Egon Schiele Exzess und Bestrafung” (1981) starring Mathieu Carrière, Jane Birkin and Christine Kaufmann with an original score by Brian Eno. A cult item if there ever was one. Dedicated to Rafaela for her appreciation of sensualism and Esotika for his appreciation of European cinema.
For those of you with prurient interests (wink, wink), scrub to 3:00 and various subsequent points in time you will have to find for yourself.
Eno’s score is mesmerizing and blissful.
From my wiki:
Egon Schiele Exzess und Bestrafung, also known as Excess and Punishment(English) and Egon Schiele, enfer et passion (French) is a 1980 film based on the life of the Austrian artist Egon Schiele. It stars Mathieu Carriere as Schiele with Jane Birkin as his artist muse Wally and Christine Kaufmann as his wife Edith and Christina Van Eyck as her sister. The film is essentially a depiction of obsession and its constituents of sex, alcohol and uncontrolled emotions. Set in Austria during the Great War Schiele is depicted as the agent of social change leading to destruction of those he loves and ultimately of himself.
The film is an international co-production with actors of German, French, Dutch and English origin. It was directed by Herbert Vesely and produced by Dieter Geissler and Robert Hess. The cinematography is by Rudolf Blahacek and the haunting music is by Brian Eno. The English language version of the film is entitled Egon Schiele Excess & Punishment.
RIP Patrick McGoohan (1928 – 2009)
RIP Patrick McGoohan, 80, American-born Irish actor (The Prisoner, Braveheart)
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-X5Hgbc688&]
Patrick Joseph McGoohan (March 19, 1928 – January 13, 2009) was an Irish American actor who rose to fame in the British film and TV industry by starring in the 1960s television series Danger Man, cult classic The Prisoner and Mel Gibson‘s epic Braveheart. McGoohan wrote and directed several episodes of The Prisoner himself. He also had a part in David Cronenberg’s paranoiac Scanners as Dr. Paul Ruth, psychopharmacist.
Joseph Losey @100
Joseph Losey @100
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SaVXuBW1Y2s]
Famous seduction scene (with dripping water faucet and many Pinter pauses) of The Servant
Joseph Losey was an American theatre and film director (1909 – 1984). One-time student of Bertolt Brecht, his best-known film is The Servant (1963).
The Servant stars Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles, Wendy Craig, and James Fox and was adapted for the screen by Harold Pinter (the first of his three collaborations with Losey, the others are Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1970)) from the novel of the same name by Robin Maugham. It is a tightly woven psychological drama that focuses on the relationships between the four central characters. The intricacies of class, servitude, ennui, role reversal and Pyrrhic victory are examined and exploded.
Each of the collaborations with Harold Pinter examined aspects of the British class system in their reflection of the master-servant relationship.
Outside of The Servant, I’ve seen The Go-Between (1970), The Prowler (1951) and Galileo (1975).
On my wishlist are:
- The Boy with Green Hair (1948)
- M (1951)
- The Intimate Stranger (1956)
- The Damned (1963)
- Modesty Blaise (1966)
- Accident (1967)
- Boom! (1968)
- The Assassination of Trotsky (1972)
- A Doll’s House (1973)
- Monsieur Klein (1976)
A plate of soup, a girl, and a coffin, or, Lev Kuleshov @110
Lev Kuleshov, Russian filmmaker and film theorist @110
For Kuleshov (1899 – 1970), the essence of the cinema was editing, the juxtaposition of one shot with another. To illustrate this principle, he created what has come to be known as the Kuleshov Experiment. In this now-famous editing exercise, shots of an actor were intercut with various meaningful images (a casket, a bowl of soup, and so on) in order to show how editing changes viewers’ interpretations of images.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grCPqoFwp5k&]
Kuleshov edited together a short film in which a shot of the expressionless face of Tsarist matinee idol Ivan Mozzhukhin was alternated with various other shots (a plate of soup, a girl, an old woman’s coffin). The film was shown to an audience who believed that the expression on Mozzhukhin’s face was different each time he appeared, depending on whether he was “looking at” the plate of soup, the girl, or the coffin, showing an expression of hunger, desire or grief respectively. Actually the footage of Mozzhukhin was the same shot repeated over and over again. Vsevolod Pudovkin (who later claimed to have been the co-creator of the experiment) described in 1929 how the audience “raved about the acting…. the heavy pensiveness of his mood over the forgotten soup, were touched and moved by the deep sorrow with which he looked on the dead woman, and admired the light, happy smile with which he surveyed the girl at play. But we knew that in all three cases the face was exactly the same.”
Kuleshov used the experiment to indicate the usefulness and effectiveness of film editing. The implication is that viewers brought their own emotional reactions to this sequence of images, and then moreover attributed those reactions to the actor, investing his impassive face with their own feelings.
The effect has also been studied by psychologists, and is well-known among modern film makers. Alfred Hitchcock refers to the effect in his conversations with François Truffaut, using actor James Stewart as the example (although Hitchcock mistakes Kuleshov with Pudovkin).
The experiment itself was created by assembling fragments of pre-existing film from the Tsarist film industry, with no new material. Mozzhukhin had been the leading romantic “star” of Tsarist cinema, and familiar to the audience.
Kuleshov demonstrated the necessity of considering montage as the basic tool of cinema art. In Kuleshov’s view, the cinema consists of fragments and the assembly of those fragments, the assembly of elements which in reality are distinct. It is therefore not the content of the images in a film which is important, but their combination. The raw materials of such an art work need not be original, but are pre-fabricated elements which can be disassembled and re-assembled by the artist into new juxtapositions.
The montage experiments carried out by Kuleshov in the late 1910s and early 1920s formed the theoretical basis of Soviet montage cinema, culminating in the famous films of the late 1920s by directors such as Sergei Eisenstein, Vsevolod Pudovkin and Dziga Vertov, among others. These films included The Battleship Potemkin, October, Mother, The End of St. Petersburg, and The Man with a Movie Camera.
Soviet montage cinema was suppressed under Stalin during the 1930s as a dangerous example of Formalism in the arts, and as being incompatible with the official Soviet artistic doctrine of Socialist Realism.
Here is Hitchcock explaining the Kuleshov effect:
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCAE0t6KwJY]
See also: continuity editing, shot reverse shot.
RIP French film director Claude Berri (1934 -2009)
RIP French film director Claude Berri (1934 – 2009)
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qwGuJnqqYJI]
Claude Berri is internationally perhaps best-known for L’Ours[1], Gérard Brach‘s screen adaptation of The Grizzly King (1916) by American novelist James Oliver Curwood. The project was directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud in the 1988 film L’Ours, known in North America as The Bear.
On my curiosa viewing list is the Claude Berri written and directed sex comedy Sex Shop,[2] which offers, outside of the funky grooves of Serge Gainsbourg, a slice of life of the French sexual revolution, or perhaps even an early case study of the ending thereof.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bGl9DbuvN2Q&]
I give you the night club sequence from the Claude Berri movie “Sex Shop”
P.S. Berri has a bit part in Michel Gast‘s screen adaptation of Boris Vian‘s J’irai cracher sur vos tombes.
Never tell the truth to an old woman, especially if she asks for it
Robert Monell‘s Jess Franco blog alerts [1] me to the death of Italian-based British actor and film director Edmund Purdom.
I had never heard of him, but the film still of poliziottesco Mister Scarface [2] was intriguing. Besides, I follow each death of the Jess Franco blog, I wish my wiki to become Jess Franco‘s wiki too.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdUAzuNSdjE]
Researching Purdom (December 19 1924 – 1 January 2009) I find the 1954 The Egyptian[3], one of the most-lavishly produced epic films. It is based on Finnish writer Mika Waltari‘s historical novel The Egyptian. The Egyptian remained the most sold foreign novel in the US before its place was taken over by The Name of the Rose, by Umberto Eco. The Egyptian has been translated into 40 languages.
I watch the clip on YouTube:
I hear this fabulous oneliner:
“Never tell the truth to an old woman, especially if she asks for it” (1:15)
I listen to the rest of the clip. The film’s dialogue is of an almost Shakespearian eloquence.
RIP Ann Savage (1921 – 2008)
RIP American actress Ann Savage at age 87, best-known for her iconic bad girl role in Detour.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFXQqEoNofA]
Ann Savage discusses Detour
Ann Savage (1921 – 2008) is mainly remembered as the cigarette-puffing femme fatale in Detour (1945) and other Hollywood B-movies and film noirs of the 1940s.
When it became public domain, Detour was often run on syndicated television and several versions were released on VHS home video. Although made on a small budget and containing only rudimentary sets and camera work, the film has garnered substantial praise through the years and is held in high regard. Director Wim Wenders called her work in Detour “at least 15 years ahead of its time”. The film’s ending is notable as an exemplum of involuntary manslaughter.
Ann most recently earned rave reviews in all media for her stunning performance as Canadian director Guy Maddin‘s mother in his most acclaimed film My Winnipeg (2008).
Bettie Page (1923 – 2008)
Bettie Page, Bizarre nr. 14
If your interest goes just a little bit beyond vanilla sex, you’ve probably come across Bettie Page.
Bettie Page (April 22, 1923 – December 11, 2008) was an American model who became famous in the 1950s for her fetish modeling and pin-up photos, taken by Irving Klaw.
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0Ynlp7sxZs]
American 2000s documentary
[Youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysclVAOLOd8&]
Bettie’s Punishment
The whole of her is Icon of Erotic Art #38.