Thursday, December 25, 2008

Yôji Yamada and Seijun Suzuki - Mixed Bag

As I said before, I was very impressed by the Cinema Japan series at the PFA in November & December.

Over the past six years, there have been a series of Samurai films released in the US that have been critically praised for humanizing the genre by focusing on the men and their (often conflicted) feelings while trying to uphold the honor of the samurai. The most famous of these films (and the one I have not seen) is Twilight Samurai (2002). The other films I'm familiar with is The Hidden Blade (2004) and Love and Honor (2006). Doing a litle research, I discovered that those three films were directed by Yôji Yamada.

Yamada had three films screened at the Cinema Japan series; I was able to catch two - The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness and Where Spring Comes Late. I was very impressed with Yamada's ability to pull at my heartstrings. He is able to portray his characters (particularly the males) in complex ways. Often, I was put off by the behavior of the men but yet Yamada can always reel me back to feel sympathy for his characters. Indeed, Yamada's trademark is the happy endings of his films. I often find happy endings contrived and ruinous but Yamada pulled it off in The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness and Where Spring Comes Late.

I criticized the ending of Love and Honor. I think Yamada was more skillful in weaving the plots in The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness and Where Spring Comes Late. It's been seven months since I saw Love and Honor; I remember the plot, I remember not liking the ending but I don't recall having such a strong dislike of it. In many cases, directors make some of their best films earlier in their career. I would imagine that it must be stifling to have to end each film on an upbeat note. Also, when I viewed The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness and Where Spring Comes Late, I was not aware it was the same director of Love and Honor so I was freed of any preconceived bias.


Where Spring Comes Late
was an emotional roller coaster as well as travelogue and social commentary of Japan in 1970. The story involves a miner and his family. For some reason, they are Catholic which is a pretty small minority in Japan. The husband decides to uproot his family, moving them from an island south of Kyushu to, I believe, the northwestern tip of Hokkaido to be dairy farmer. Without a car, the family of five (father, mother, paternal grandfather, son and infant daughter) must traverse the entire length of Japan in trains, planes and ferries.

Along the way, they see the changing nature of Japanese society. Industrialization is a big theme as Yamada includes a number of long, panning shots of factories. They also encounter the disruption this new society is causing. The grandfather was supposed to be left to live with his other son who works at a factory. Upon visiting him, it's clear that leaving grandpa with him would exacerbate his financial situation - crushing mortgage, small house, batch of kids, etc. So grandpa goes to Hokkaido. Chishu Ryu, the actor that plays the old man, delivers a great performance as a man nearing the end of his life who wants to retain some dignity while having his own foibles as well as enjoying the cross county trip.

Where Spring Comes Late (Chishu Ryu, far left and Chieko Baisho, far right)
Anyway, the family sees the world fair, endures the death of the infant and soon after arriving at their desolate, frigid home, the grandfather dies. It looks pretty bleak but in the next scene, it is springtime, the hills are green, their first calf is born and the wife is pregnant. Chieko Baisho, who is a Yamada perennial (she was in The Hidden Blade) also delivers a strong performance as the woman trying to hold her family together despite not wanting to move and her husband's stubborn ways. As if no one can escape Yamada's jaundiced eye, she must whore herself to get money for the trip (with her husband aware if not tacitly approving).

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A few years ago, I saw Princess Raccoon (2005) starring Ziyi Zhang. The film was in Japanese although Zhang spoke her lines in Mandarin. I recall not liking the film which was a musical. Princess Raccoon was directed by Seijun Suzuki. Suzuki also directed Tokyo Drifter (1966) which I enjoyed greatly at the Cinema Japan series. I guess even the great ones strikeout sometime.

Tokyo Drifter had scenes that reminded me of the bar fight in Blazing Saddles and an obscure Warren Beatty film called Mickey One (1965). I saw Mickey One (directed by Arthur Penn) nearly 14 years ago at the Castro and I can still recall it so that must mean somthing. Given some of the similarities and that it was made one year before Tokyo Drifter, I wonder if Suzuki was influenced by it.

Here is the SF Chronicle review of the film when it played at the Castro.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Taking Inventory as of December 24

Cinema Japan Series at PFA

The Ceremony directed by Nagisa Oshima; Japanese with subtitles; (1971)
Boy directed by Nagisa Oshima; Japanese with subtitles; (1969)
Black Rain directed by Shohei Imamura; Japanese with subtitles; (1989)
Onibaba directed by Kaneto Shindô; Japanese with subtitles; (1964)
Tokyo Drifter directed by Seijun Suzuki; Japanese with subtitles; (1966)
Violence at Noon directed by Nagisa Oshima; Japanese with subtitles; (1966)
A Last Note directed by Kaneto Shindô; Japanese with subtitles; (1995)
Where Spring Comes Late directed by Yoji Yamada; Japanese with subtitles; (1970)
Intentions of Murder directed by Shohei Imamura; Japanese with subtitles; (1964)

Dirty Dozen: The Films of Robert Aldrich at PFA

Attack! starring Jack Palance, Eddie Albert & Lee Marvin; (1956)
The Garment Jungle starring Lee J. Cobb, Richard Boone & Robert Loggia; (1957)
Ulzana’s Raid starring Burt Lancaster & Bruce Davison; (1972)
Twilight’s Last Gleaming starring Burt Lancaster & Charles Durning; (1977)

I Can't Think Straight (2008) - Official Site
Happy-Go-Lucky directed by Mike Leigh; starring Sally Hawkins; (2008) - Official Site
Baby (2008) - Official Site
Timecrimes directed by Nacho Vigolando; Spanish with subtitles; (2007) - Official Site
Milk directed by Gus Van Sant; starring Sean Penn; (2008) - Official Site

I saw I Can't Think Straight and Happy-Go-Lucky at the Roxie, Timecrimes at the Bridge, Milk at the Castro and Baby at the 4-Star.

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I saw Milk at the Castro at a 4PM showing on a Tuesday afternoon. I was surprised at the crowd; I would guess there was over 750 people in the audience.

Although nominated for many Best Picture awards, I was not suitably impressed with Milk. Sean Penn transformed himself into Harvey Milk. As I recall from my teenage years when Penn dated and married Madonna, he was quoted using the word "faggot" in a derogatory manner when confronting paparazzi. Of course, that was many years ago and Sean Penn in 2008 doesn't bear much resemblance to Jeff Spicoli. Putting Penn aside, I thought the portrayal of Jack Lira (Diego Luna of Y Tu Mamá También fame) was pitifully shallow, unintentionally funny and less than one dimensional (if that is physically possible). After Lira commits suicide, Penn is forced to utter the following line through tears of grief - "I could have come home at 6:15!"

Josh Brolin's role as Dan White has elicited rave reviews. I have to admit that it is hard to take your eyes off Brolin when he is on the screen and his scenes with Penn show two actors at the top of their game. However, I wasn't sure if I was watching his scenes intently because of Brolin's performance or because I know what Dan White did. According to Penn's Harvey Milk, White was a closeted homosexual that created empathy from Milk towards White. I don't know if White was closeted; I have never heard that he was. However, by casting White's motivation in that die, White (the man and the character) is done a disservice. I didn't think Brolin was allowed to explore the depths of Dan White. Certainly the movie is about Harvey Milk so Dan White's motivations are secondary to his actions but I just didn't see the depth to his performance that I've read about in various reviews.

James Franco as Scott Smith and Emile Hirsh as Cleve Jones make the most of their screen time.

To be honest, I thought Milk was an entertaining biopic with the added bonus of being set in the 70's and filmed at San Francisco locations I'm familiar with. I don't think it is the Best Film of 2008. I was impressed with the opening title sequence which consisted of vintage footage of men being rousted by cops from gay bars in the 1950's or early 60's. Most men hid their faces but a few men didn't hide from the camera and their visages were ones of defiance, frustration, fear, anger and even apathy. There as also a fun split screen closing sequence where the actor was shown with the person they portrayed. The resemblance in many instances was profound.

Another observation - the first scene in the film shows Milk picking up Smith in a NYC subway station in 1970. I'm pretty sure that scene was filmed at Forest Hill Station in San Francisco. On the day I saw the film, I took Muni Metro Outbound. I wasn't paying attention and missed the Castro Station stop. I had to ride up to Forest Hill and catch the Inbound train back to Castro Station. I'm certain the scene on the stairs was filmed at Forest Hill Station.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Timecrimes and the San Francisco Sweep

Last night, I saw Timecrimes at the Bridge Theater. The film was an entertaining time travel story where three temporal versions of a man co-exist with the latter two trying to steer events to avoid the time loop. The film was shot in Spain.

I realized upon entering the Bridge Theater that I had not been in that theater before. My curiosity piqued, I checked the San Francisco Movie Guide in the Chronicle this morning and I believe that I have now been to every movie theater within the City and County of San Francisco. At least, I've been to every theater listed in the movie guide. Some theaters don't pay for a listing. Read the Balboa Theater Newsletter (Dear Friends Section) for the week of December 19 for more information.

I've been to all the theaters listed in the December 23 edition of the Chronicle - AMC 1000, AMC Loews Metreon, Balboa, Castro, Century SF Centre, Cinearts @ Empire, 4-Star, Sundance Kabuki, Bridge, Clay, Embarcadero, Lumiere, Opera Plaza, Marina, Presidio, Red Vic, Roxie Stonestown and Vogue. I went to the Marina and the Presidio before they were rennovated by Frank Lee. Were they always (at least since 1992) owned by the Lee family?

There used to be a lot more theaters in the City - Coronet, Galaxy, Metro, Northpoint, Regency I and II, St. Francis and more have all closed down in the last 10 years or so. I found an interesting website that celebrates old theaters from around the world. It's called Cinema Treasures.

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My original intention last night was to see the 7PM showing of Milk at the Castro. Monday is supposedly the slowest day for movie theaters; hence the Roxie's $5 Monday special, the audience of 12 at Timecrimes last night and the Castro and PFA's frequent closing on Mondays. However, there was a line that stretched most of the block to see Milk last night. The line is made worse by the fact that the Castro only has one ticket booth and can seat 1,600 people.

I don't know if I'll get to see Milk at the Castro. Today is the last day it's showing at the Castro.

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The cashier at the Bridge told me that The Wrestler with Mickey Rourke and Marisa Tomei is opening there on January 9. This highly anticipated film has already won several awards including two for Rourke & Tomei by the San Francisco Film Critics Circle. I've had a crush on Marisa Tomei since I first saw her in the late 80's on the first season of A Different World.

I don't know if it is the economy, cold weather or rain but I was able to park on busy Geary St. at 9 PM last night, directly in front of the Bridge which is at Geary and Blake. It seems that that area is always tough to park in but not last night. Come to think of it, I was able to park one block away from the 4-Star at 2 PM on Sunday & on Green St between Webster and Buchanan three hours later. Those areaa are even tougher to find parking than the Inner Richmond/Laurel Heights.

Monday, December 22, 2008

The Sparrow Has Landed

Yesterday, I saw Baby at the 4-Star Theater. I noticed that they had sandwich board sign on the sidewalk with a movie poster for Sparrow. That Johnnie To film was my favorite from the Chinese American Film Festival in November. Granted, I only saw three films at the festival but I caught several films from the Johnnie To retrospective at the PFA earlier this year. I've become a fan of To's works and Sparrow is no exception.

Sparrow, which is part comedy & part quasi-musical, tells the story of a gang of pickpockets that go up against a gangster (and former pickpocket himself) to win the freedom of the gangster's mistress. It sets up an improbable but entertaining climax set in a downpour involving rival gangs of pickpockets using razor blades to steal the key to her freedom. Filmed in Hong Kong over a three year period, Sparrow is a visual tribute to the Hong Kong that To grew up in but is fast giving way to modernization.

"Sparrow" is a slang term for a pickpocket. I think in Gangs of New York, Leonardo DiCaprio's narration describes Cameron Diaz's character as a sparrow. In that film, she was posing as a housemaid while stealing valuables from her employer although I think she was a pickpocket as well.

Here is a link to a CAAM posting announcing Sparrow's opening at the 4-Star.

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Let me write a quick note on Baby which was described as an Asian American Boyz n the Hood by me (and later I discovered the film poster). I saw Boyz n the Hood when it came out in 1991. Actually, I remember seeing it in 1992 in Vancouver, British Columbia. That film deeply affected me probably because I had not seen gang life depicted so powerfully. I can't say realistically because I've never been in "da hood."

For some reason Baby was set 20 year ago. The action alternates between 1986 and 1993, I believe. It didn't really add much to the script except to allow for 80's cars and pagers to be prominently featured. Regardless, I think I'm jaded about films about gang life. I can't point to anything wrong with the film but it wasn't as powerful as I was expecting. Ron Yuan, as Baby's gangsta mentor, stood out in the cast. With a melodic voice, pumped up biceps and the 80's hair metal look, he cuts a wide swath through the film.

Baby wasn't a bad way to spend a rainy, Sunday afternoon but it reminded me of muscle car not firing on all cylinders - it's still a sweet ride but you can feel that it's not running quite right.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Ringing in the New Year with The Hunchback of Grace Cathedral

I read yesterday that Grace Cathedral will screen The Hunchback of Notre Dame on December 31. They will have two screenings at 7 PM and 10 PM. The version of the film they are showing is the 1923 silent film starring Lon Chaney (not the 1939 version with Charles Laughton and Maureen O'Hara).

Tickets are $20 and available at City Box Office on-line or in person at 180 Redwood Street, Suite 100 in San Francisco.

Grace Cathedral is an Episcopal church at the top of Nob Hill and has been prominently featured in many movies. I recall a scene from Bullitt on the steps of the cathedral. There is also a popular labyrinth there that people walk. Many years ago, I remember going there on Xmas Eve and walking it. I have never seen a film there so I don't know where it will screen. The films will screen in "The Nave of the Cathedral." I had to look up what nave meant. The nave is the central approach to the high altar. I don't think I've ever seen a film in a church.

$20 for a movie ticket is a little pricey but I can ride the cable car up Nob Hill to get to Grace. I like to stand on the running board, lean out slightly and feel the wind in my space. I'm like Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

San Francisco Silent Film Festival Winter Event

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival has posted the program for their 4th Annual Winter Event. They will screen four programs on Saturday, February 14 at the Castro Theater.

The films are Our Hospitality (1923) starring Buster Keaton, A Kiss From Mary Pickford (1927) - a Russian slapstick about a theater usher that meets Mary Pickford, Sunrise (1927) directed by F.W. Murnau and starring Janet Gaynor and The Cat and The Canary (1927).

Several months ago, I read that this event would feature Bardelys the Magnificent. Apparently, that fell through or perhaps they decided to save it for their 3 day festival in July.

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The Mechanics' Institute released their January and February CinemaLit schedule. The January theme is Pre-[Hays] Code Gloss and Grit. The films are Night Nurse directed by William Wellman, Blonde Venus directed by von Sternberg and starring Marlene Dietrich, Three on a Match and Twentieth Century. I caught Night Nurse in 2006 at the Balboa when it was still a rep house. They had a Barbara Stanwyck Pre-Code Double Feature. I miss the Balboa's rep house programming.

The February theme is Paul Newman: Ol' Blue-Eyes is Back. The films are Hud, Cool Hand Luke, Rachel, Rachel and The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean.

I've seen most of these films. I joined the Mechanics' Institute thinking I would see a number of CinemaLit films. However, 8 months have transpired and I have yet to attend one.

The CinemaLit series is held on Fridays at 6:30 PM at 57 Post. Members are free and non-members are asked to donate $10. RSVP is required. Check website for more details.

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It's clear to me that mid-January to late February will be a very busy period for me if I see all the films I want to see. Starting with the three programs at Berlin and Beyond on January 19, I could easily have access and desire to 50 films in 6 weeks. Noir City runs from January 23 to February 1 and four days later, SF Indiefest begins on February 5. Indiefest continues until February 19. The von Sternberg program is from January 15 to Feburary 22. The Pulp Writers program at the PFA will be from February 13 to 28. The aforementioned Silent Film event is on February 14. The nine hour The Human Condition screen on February 15.

Conservative estimate of films to be viewed: Berlin and Beyond (3), Noir City (18), Indiefest (20), von Sterberg (10), Pulp Writers (6), Silent Film event (3), and The Human Condition (3). That adds up to 43 but once I buy a festival pass, I'm relentless in making it a cost effective choice.

I might have to jetison Indiefest from my schedule to keep my sanity. I say that but when I read the program guide, I'll undoubtedly have a change of heart if there are any films that look decent.

Movie Marathon Man and PFA 2009 Schedule

My 36 day marathon ended last night. The final tally was 34 films in 36 days.

Original Film List
The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival
Lola Montès - at the Castro
Vera Cruz - Robert Aldrich
The Last Sunset - Robert Aldrich
The Show Must Go On - Korean American Film Festival
Secret Sunshine - Korean American Film Festival
The Ceremony - Cinema Japan
The Big Knife - Robert Aldrich
Boy - Cinema Japan
Attack! - Robert Aldrich
Black Rain - Cinema Japan
Onibaba - Cinema Japan
The Garment Jungle - Robert Aldrich
The Killing of Sister George - Robert Aldrich
Tokyo Drifter - Cinema Japan
Violence at Noon - Cinema Japan
Ulzana’s Raid - Robert Aldrich
A Last Note - Cinema Japan
Where Spring Comes Late - Cinema Japan
Twilight’s Last Gleaming - Robert Aldrich
Intentions of Murder - Cinema Japan
Quantum of Solace

Substitute Films
The Times of Harvey Milk - Roxie
Appaloosa
Ashes of Time Redux
I Can't Think Straight - Roxie
Happy-Go-Lucky - Roxie

I'll write more about some of the individual films. Briefly, I was greatly impressed by the Cinema Japan series at the PFA. Robert Aldrich's films were more hit and miss.

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As if on cue, PFA released their early 2009 program on their website within the last 24 hours.

The von Sternberg program I'm looking forward to is called Josef von Sternberg: Eros and Abstraction. Sixteen films run from January 15 to February 22. Several of the films are silents with Judith Rosenberg providing piano accompaniment.

January 15 - Underworld
January 18 - The Last Command
January 20 - Children of Divorce
January 24 - The Docks of New York
January 31 - Thunderbolt
February 1 - The Blue Angel
February 6 - Morocco
February 7 - An American Tragedy
February 7 - Dishonored
February 8 - The Salvation Hunters
February 12 - Shanghai Express
February 12 - Blonde Venus
February 14 - The Scarlet Empress
February 20 - The Devil Is a Woman
February 20 - Crime and Punishment
February 22 - The Saga of Anatahan

The films screening from January 24 to February 14 conflict with either Noir City or SF Indiefest. I'll have to examine the schedules more closely if I can accommodate them.

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Speaking of Noir City, PFA has a program sure to appeal to Noirist like me. One-Two Punch: Pulp Writers on Film screens 8 films from February 13 to 28.

Crack-Up
The Kill-Off
Miami Blues
Black Angel
Phantom Lady
Série noire
Screaming Mimi
The Woman Chaser

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Another PFA event is Masaki Kobayashi’s The Human Condition, "a nine-hour epic about Japan’s occupation of China during the Second World War." The program consists of three films screening on February 15.

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On Wednesdays during the spring semester at Cal, PFA is showing Film 50, "an undergraduate course designed for non–film majors [which will be] open to the public as space permits." The films start at 3 PM so I won't be able to attend many (any?) of them.

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The Roxie is offering $5 admission for all films on Mondays for an indefinite time. That's cheaper than their Roxie Pass price.

Baby has been extended at the 4 Star until Wednesday, December 24.

Tickets for Berlin and Beyond can be purchased at the Goethe Institute at 530 Bush St. (near the Chinatown arch). You can avoid the ticket processing fee (I hate processing fees and/or I'm a cheap bastard) by purchasing at Goethe. In addition, they only charged me $8 for my ticket ($10 is the listed price). I don't know if that was a mistake or an in-person discount. I didn't realize it until I checked the program guide and noticed the regular program price. The Goethe is interesting - there are a bunch of Aryan looking, German speaking people working there. Situated at the edge of Chinatown, it must make for amusing cultural contrasts and misunderstandings at certain times. I can imagine a German speaking person trying to order Americanized Chinese food in English from a Cantonese speaking restaurant worker in Chinatown.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Closing in on 36 and The Candy Snatchers

I'm going into the home stretch of my 36 day death march. The films I have seen since November 12 (which seems like a lifetime ago):

The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival
Lola Montès - at the Castro
Vera Cruz - Robert Aldrich
The Last Sunset - Robert Aldrich
The Show Must Go On - Korean American Film Festival
Secret Sunshine - Korean American Film Festival
The Ceremony - Cinema Japan
The Big Knife - Robert Aldrich
Boy - Cinema Japan
Attack! - Robert Aldrich
Black Rain - Cinema Japan
Onibaba - Cinema Japan
The Garment Jungle - Robert Aldrich
The Killing of Sister George - Robert Aldrich
Tokyo Drifter - Cinema Japan
Violence at Noon - Cinema Japan

I attended holiday parties on December 10 & 11. The Garment Jungle and The Killing of Sister George was a double feature on the night of the 11th. I left the party early on December 11 to get to PFA to see The Garment Jungle. The Killing of Sister George runs 2 hours, 2 minutes and was the second half of the double bill. I was already dragging after staying out late on the 10th. I passed on The Killing of Sister George since seeing it would mean I would get home between 12:30 and 1:00 AM and then have to get up for work the next morning.

Day 36 is Wednesday, December 17. I've seen 24 films on the list, missed 6 and have 5 more to go. That adds to 35 and I planned on seeing Quantum of Solace to average one a day. Like all good plans, this one had to adapt. I added the following three films as substitute films.

The Times of Harvey Milk
Appaloosa
Ashes of Time Redux
I Can't Think Straight

I plan on seeing Happy-Go-Lucky at the Roxie on Monday, December 15.

I want to see Baby at the 4 Star Theater before it ends on December 18. However, I have one or two films planned from today to December 17 and December 18 is Day 37. I could see three films tomorrow and squeeze Baby in December 15 but that would mean three films in a 7 hour period including a BART ride from Berkeley to the Mission District. I'm worn out so I may call it quits at 34 films in 36 days and see Baby on Day 37.

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Speaking of Baby, some quick research shows that it screened at the 2007 San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (March 2007). However, IMDB lists it as a 2008 film.

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For the record, when I went to find my DVD of Dr. Zee's Chasing the Dragon, I discovered it was Combat Mortal. I didn't get to the 4 Star to see his trilogy as that would mean leaving my Xmas party earlier and staying out later than I did on the 11th.

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The Castro released most of their January calendar on-line. Berlin and Beyond and Noir City dominate the month. One program I hadn't notice before was MiDNiTES FOR MANiACS (the i's are always lower case) presentation of Broken Homes For The Holidays on January 9. This triple feature includes Watcher in the Woods and Stand By Me. It's the third feature (the midnight show - technically 11:45) that interest me. It's called The Candy Snatchers and the program states they will be screening the "RARE original grindhouse 35mm print." Released in the 1973, this film is featured in badmovieplanet.com as "an unrelentingly bleak morality play" and "the movie reminds me of, those old hard nose detective shows from the '70s like...an episode of Starsky & Hutch gone horribly, horribly wrong." It's sound like my kind of movie. Read the full synopsis (with spoilers).

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Being a creature of habit, I keep going to the same restaurants when I am near a theater since spending hours at a theater leaves little time to cook. The three theaters I go to most ofter are the Roxie, the Castro and PFA. When I go to the Roxie, I frequently get a Falafel or Falafel Deluxe from Truly Mediterranean. When I go to PFA, I get a Persian Burger (i.e. lamb) at Bongo Burger. When I go to the Castro, I stop by Orphan Andy's on 17th which is an old-timey, 24 hour diner (breakfast served all day). It's old time decor not the staff and clientele which run queer given the neighborhood. Actually, the last time I was there was the first time I have seen a female waitress there. I'm partial to the Chicken Fried Steak, omelettes and Club Sandwich.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Bank Robbers, Dietrich & von Sternberg

I surfed the Berlin and Beyond website a little more and found the 2009 Festival site. The full schedule is listed.

I didn't find much that interested me. Fortunately, the two (possibly three) programs I'm interested in are on the same day and back to back (to back). On Monday, January 19 (Martin Luther King, Jr. Day), they are screening The Blue Angel at the Castro. The 1930 film was directed by Josef von Sternberg and starred Marlene Dietrich and Emil Jannings. This screening is the English version of the film. The footnote paragraph states "the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley will screen the original German version of Der Blaue Engel on February 1 at 2pm as part of the Joseph [sic] von Sternberg retrospective."

That's exciting as von Sternberg has become one of my favorite directors. Having seen some of his more well known films (Shanghai Express, The Scarlet Empress and The Shanghai Gesture) I'm anxious to see some of his other films. I've come to put great faith in PFA's programming.

The second film in the festival that interests me is called 12 Winters. It screens immediately after The Blue Angel. I don't recognize the director or any of the stars of this 2008 German film. The synopsis is what caught my attention. It sounds like modern film noir.

Based on one of the most spectacular series of bank robberies in Germany, 12 Winters tells the story of Klaus (Axel Prahl) and Mike (Jürgen Vogel), two criminals that become friends in prison. When they happen to meet each other again after they have been released they begin to plan the perfect bank robbery, and it seem to work. For twelve years the two keep on robbing banks, always in winter. They work fast, very professional, and concentrate on rural areas. Well arranged hold ups soon becomes their trademark. The police are in the dark for years. But they won’t stick to their guns...

The third film which is mildly interesting is Hollywood Speaks German which precedes The Blue Angel.

Since I'm lazy today, I'll just copy the synopsis from the film program.

By 1929, new technologies made “talkies” possible, but dubbing films into another language proved to be a still insurmountable technological challenge. To make films available to a wider audience, the only feasible option was to reshoot different language versions. From 1930 through 1932, all major Hollywood studios shot films in German. Famous German actors such as Heinrich George, Paul Morgan, and Camilla Horn came to shoot on location in Hollywood, and many German-speaking actors already in Hollywood were often chosen, such as Greta Garbo, Edward G. Robinson, and Marion Lessing. A number of famous American actors, such as Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy and Buster Keaton were required to learn German phonetics. Parallel to this development, many German actors were filmed speaking English, as evidenced by this year’s Berlin & Beyond’s classic feature The Blue Angel.

The schedule for January 19 is:

3:30 Hollywood Speaks German
6:30 The Blue Angel
9:00 12 Winters

I'm off work that day so I could catch the 3:30 screening. I'll play it by ear.

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Before I forget, David Thomson introduced Attack! on Saturday at PFA. The opening credits listed the film as Attack so I'm not sure how the exclamation point got in the title or program.

Thomson wrote the 1000 page ("magnun opus") Biographical Dictionary of Film in 1975. Now, he has a new book out; it's called 'Have You Seen ...?' (1007 pages). It's received good reviews in the San Francisco Chronicle. The book consists of 500 word essays on 1000 films. That means you can fit 1000 words on one page? He was selling autographed copies at PFA on Saturday.

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I've already scoped out Berlin and Beyond (January 15 to 21) and Noir City (January 23 to February 1). The festival after that is the San Francisco Independent Film Festival (aka SF Indiefest) from February 5 to 19. I haven't seen anything about their program. I did notice that Bird's Nest which was the first film I saw at this year's DocFest is on the Belin and Beyond program. I can't whole-heartedly recommend it though. The documentary is about the architects that designed the Bird's Nest Stadium in Bejing. I characterized the film as "Not a Bad Way to Kill an Hour or Two."

Monday, December 8, 2008

36 is Getting Kind of Old

I keep working my way down my goal of 36 films in 36 days. I'm not quite as burnt out as I am from some film festivals but I'm dragging a little.

The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival
Lola Montès - at the Castro
Vera Cruz - Robert Aldrich
The Last Sunset - Robert Aldrich
The Show Must Go On - Korean American Film Festival
Secret Sunshine - Korean American Film Festival
The Ceremony - Cinema Japan
The Big Knife - Robert Aldrich
Boy - Cinema Japan
Attack! - Robert Aldrich
Black Rain - Cinema Japan
Onibaba - Cinema Japan

I missed The Big Knife on December 4. I had planned on going to PFA five days in a row but decided that was too much so I went 4 out of 5 days. The The Big Knife, which had mixed reviews, was the casualty.

I was able to add two films to replace the five I have missed so far. While visiting my father in Las Vegas, we saw Appaloosa and Kar Wai Wong's Ashes of Time Redux. That puts me up to 23 films with 10 films left on my list.

My Roxie pass expires on December 16 and I have two films left. It's a use it or lose it scenario. I've decided to see I Can't Think Straight before December 11 (probably tomorrow night) and Happy-Go-Lucky between December 12 and 16. If I can see those two films, I'll be at 35 (assuming I see all 10 films mentioned in the previous paragraph). Maybe I'll go see Milk at the Castro to get me to 36.

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A woman (whose name I did not catch) introduced Boy at PFA last week. Boy was a 1969 film by Nagisa Oshima. I'll have to write more about the film later. Anyway, she mentioned that there will be an Oshima retrospective at PFA next year. I thnk she said February to March.

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The 4 Star Theater has some interesting stuff coming up. On December 11, they are screening a Dr. Zee Trilogy. If you don't know who Dr. Zee is, join the club. Last year, while waiting for a film to start at the Asian American Film Festival at the Castro, a man approached me and gave me a DVD. The film was Chasing the Dragon. When he told me the title, I thought he was referring to a Dominic Stansberry novel by the same name. I had read a good review of the novel so I thought maybe they had made a film. I was informed that the film was a martial arts film starring Dr. Zee. I politely accepted the man's DVD and it's sitting at the bottom of my closet as I write.

While surfing the 4 Star website, I come across a one night, triple feature called Dr. Zee's Trilogy. The films are Combat Mortal, Martial Medicine Man and Chasing the Dragon. I can't find any of those films on IMDB. I can find Mortal Kombat. Typically, I'd take a flyer but on the 11th, PFA is having an Aldrich double feature - The Garment Jungle and The Killing of Sister George. Dr. Zee's film may be hidden gems or just plain crap. I'll have to dig out Chasing the Dragon and watch it (on my PC since I don't have a DVD player). If it's any good, I may substitute Aldrich with Zee (A to Z).

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From December 12 to 18, 4 Star has the exclusive San Francisco engagement of Baby. I'll just copy the synopsis from the 4 Star website.

Baby is the tragic tale of an Asian youth trapped in the world of East Los Angeles gang life. Our story winds through the streets of Monterey Park and Alhambra and the seedy, dead end worlds of hostess bars, pool halls and drug dens. Baby is a motherless, poverty stricken teenager with only an alcoholic father left to raise him. Things get worse when he gets mixed up with a pack of older gangsters who live next door. At the age of eleven he gets convicted of manslaughter and spends the next six years in Juvenile Hall. Once released from prison, Baby struggles to fit into a society that rejects him. He soon finds his way back to a lifestyle of drugs, murder and street gangs. A lost love and a best friend are his last hopes to turn his life around before it is too late.

It sounds interesting to me...kind of like an Asian American Boyz n the Hood.

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Noir City released their full schedule for Noir City 7 (January 23 — February 1, 2009 at the Castro). Arlene Dahl will be appearing in person. The theme "Newspaper Noir, with many of the films set in the world of newspapers, or, in some cases, publishing or radio."

The line-up is:

Deadline USA
Scandal Sheet
Blind Spot
Chicago Deadline
Wicked As They Come
Slightly Scarlet
Cry of the Hunted
Ace in the Hole
Alias Nick Beal
Night Editor
The Harder They Fall
Johnny Stool Pigeon
While the City Sleeps
Shakedown
The Big Clock
Strange Triangle
The Unsuspected
Desperate
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
Two O'Clock Courage
The Killers
Sweet Smell of Success

I haven't had a chance to study the program well but I've seen
Sweet Smell of Success many times (it just played at the Castro last month). It stars Burt Lancaster (with horn rimmed glasses and doing a Walter Winchell impersonation) and Tony Curtis. Several scenes were filmed in Toots Shor. I can highly recommend it. The Killers was based on a Hemingway short story (a Nick Adams story). I've seen it many times as well.

While the City Sleeps and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt were directed by Fritz Lang. Ace in the Hole was directed by Billy Wilder and stars Kirk Douglas. Deadline USA stars Humphrey Bogart. According to the program guide, 16 of the 22 films are not available on DVD. $100 for the Festival Pass.

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The Red Vic is showing Ashes of Time Redux on January 9 and 10. On the 8th, it's showing Kar Wai Wong's Fallen Angels which has achieved high regard by film critics. On January 11, Jackie Chan's kung fu cult classic The Legend of Druken Master is playing at midnight (1 minute after 11:59 PM on Saturday, January 10).

The Red Vic is also showing two French New Wave films in January. Francois Truffaut's The 400 Blows and Jean-Luc Godard's Vivre Sa Vie with Anna Karina which I missed at this autumn's Godard Retrospective at PFA.

Ziggy Stardust and the Spider from Mars which I've heard about for years but never seen is getting a two day run (January 20 & 21). Finally, Donnie Darko (one of my favorites) gets a three day run (January 23 to 25) - both Gyllenhaals, Echo and Bunnymen soundtrack, evil bunny rabbit, Drew Barrymore teaching English and temporal bending involving a jet engine.

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I can't find a program guide for Berlin and Beyond (January 15 to 21) at the Castro. I've never been to that festival; for some reason modern German cinema doesn't appeal to me. A few years ago, I wanted to see Downfall (Der Untergang) with Bruno Ganz as Adolph Hitler. It opened or closed Berlin and Beyond that year but I was too cheap to pay the higher ticket price. That film later got a limited theatrical release so I was able to see it. As I mentioned previously, they are screening The Blue Angel this year. Maybe I'll swing by the Castro to see if they have hard copies of the program guide available.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Taking Inventory as of November 28

Cinema Japan Series at PFA

Enjo directed by Kon Ichikawa; Japanese with subtitles; (1958)
A Full-Up Train directed by Kon Ichikawa; Japanese with subtitles; (1957)
Ikiru starring Takashi Shimura; directed by Akira Kurosawa; Japanese with subtitles; (1952)
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness directed by Yoji Yamada; Japanese with subtitles; (1977)
Vengeance is Mine directed by Shohei Imamura; Japanese with subtitles; (1979)

2008 San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival (Third I)

A Throw of Dice Silent with intertitles; (1929)
Maqbool Hindi with subtitles; (2003)
Om Shanti Om Hindi with subtitles; (2007)
Flow: For Love of Water; (2007)
The Glow of White Women; (2007)

2008 San Francisco Chinese American Film Festival

Shanghai Red with Vivian Wu; Mandarin with subtitles; (2006)
Sparrow directed by Johnny To; Cantonese with subtitles; (2008)
Gun of Mercy English and Mandarin without subtitles; (2007)

2008 Korean American Film Festival

Secret Sunshine Korean with subtitles; (2007)

2008 Annual American Indian Film Festival

The Exiles; (1961) - Official Website
Second Stories: Honour Thy Father; (2008) - Official Website
Darkness Calls in Gitxsan; (2008)
The Creation

Dirty Dozen: The Films of Robert Aldrich at PFA

Vera Cruz with Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster; (1954)
The Last Sunset with Kirk Douglas and Rock Hudson; (1961)

The Phantom of the Opera with Lon Chaney; Silent with intertitles and live accompaniment; (1925/1929)
The Passion of Joan of Arc directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer; Silent with intertitles and live accompaniment; (1928)
Lola Montès directed by Max Ophüls; French, German & English with subtitles; (1955)
Slumdog Millionaire directed by Danny Boyle; Hindi & English with subtitles; (2008) - Official Website
The Times of Harvey Milk directed by Rob Epstein; (1984)
Appaloosa directed by and starring Ed Harris; costarring Viggo Mortensen; (2008) - Official Website

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Takashi Shimura (star of Ikiru) is best known for another Kurosawa film he made. He was the leader in The Seven Samurai (1954). He, Mifune and Kurosawa teamed up 1949 for Stray Dog which is a compelling police procedural/portrait of occupied Japan.

Maqbool is a retelling of Shakespeare's MacBeth with Muslim gangsters in Mumbai. The film stars Irfan Khan who has a supporting role as the police detective in Slumdog Millionaire. Maqbool co-stars the beautiful Tabu who has a cameo appearance in Om Shanti Om.

Maqbool, Slumdog Millionaire and The Glow of White Women deal with Indians of Muslim faith. The first two films are set in Mumbai; the latter (a documentary) in South Africa. Slumdog Millionaire has a scene depicting a race riot in the Bombay slums where Hindus attack Muslims.

Adell Aldrich (Robert Aldrich's daughter) introduced Vera Cruz and The Last Sunset. Adell Aldrich has several credits as a script supervisor including Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye, Pretty Woman and Wayne's World. She said her father would take the family on location for his films and she learned the industry that way.

Shanghai Red was written and directed by Cuban born director Oscar L. Costo who is Vivian Wu's husband.

The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness was recently remade as The Yellow Handkerchief with William Hurt and Maria Bello. The setting was changed to post-Katrina, Cajun Louisiana. The Yellow Handkerchief played at this year's San Francisco International Film Festival. I hope I can catch it sometime to compare the two versions.

The Exiles prominently features Angels Flight on Bunker Hill in Los Angeles. Angels Flight was a well-known furnicular railway near downtown LA. It was shown in many films (typically noir films) set in LA during the 1940's and 50's. The Exiles is set on this block. I recall a scene in front of the liqour store in the lower right corner of the photo. The couple in The Exiles lived on the right side of the street, half way up the hill. The tunnel is Third St. and the cross street is Hill St.



Angels Flight was dismantled in 1969 but restored in 1996 to a nearby location on Hill St. betwen 3rd and 4th. The original gateway and trains were pulled from storage and used from 1996 to 2001. In 2001, there was an accident that caused a fatality. The cause of the accident was improper safety designs for the furnicular drive. Angels Flight has been closed since then. The gateway and rails still stand but there is no rail service.

Cuban Criminal Mastermind, the Olympics, Football, Leopold & Loeb, Dying of Cancer and Vulcan Love

Despite my overly ambitious film going schedule, I do try to squeeze in some other activities. I try to go to the gym as often as possible. I keep track of my gym visits too and I get there about 70% of the time which is about 20 days per month. November was horrible for me. I was/will be out of town for 10 days in November plus one day the gym closed early (unannounced) plus the movie schedule that did not allow for gym visits.

After movies and the gym, my main leisure activity is reading. I subscribe to the Wall St. Journal and I read the San Francisco Chronicle most days on my commute. I like to read the book reviews because it give me a guide to books that may interest me.

I've completed some very interesting books over the past few months.

The best was Storming Las Vegas by John Huddy. This book tells the true story of Jose Vigoa, a Cuban refugee who led a crew on a spree of armored car and casino robberies in Las Vegas from 1998 to 2000. Vigoa's robberies were extremely well planned which reflects Vigoa training in the Soviet military. The author even suggests that Vigoa was a spy who came over on the Mariel Boat Lift. The author posits that Vigoa was a sleeper agent who turned to drug dealing and armed robbery. This book would make a tremendous movie - think Heat meets Scarface.

I also read Rome 1960 by David Maraniss. This book chronicles the 1960 Olympics. While it focuses mostly on US athletes, it also provides information about foreign athletes, the geopolitical environment (Cold War, China vs. Taiwan, Italy's not so recent fascist past, South African apartheid, etc.) and the Olympic governance and hypocritical stances with respect to "amateurism." Cassius Clay, Rafer Johnson, Wilma Rudolph, Oscar Robertson and Jerry West are among the more well known athletes to win gold in Rome. There are some many vignettes about Ethiopean Abebe Bikila running the marathon in bare feet (because his sneakers didn't fit), a cyclist collapsing during a time trial and dying (ampethamines were the cause) and US swimmer Lance Larson winning the silver medal in the 100 M freestyle despite having a faster time than the gold medalist.

Another sports themed book I recently finished was The Best Game Ever by Mark Bowden. This book tells the story of the 1958 NFL Championship Game which was groundbreaking. It is considered the beginnng of the NFL's march to preeminence among US sports. It was an overtime game between the Baltimore Colts and the New York Giants. In hindsight, the teams were loaded with Hall of Famers. Frank Gifford led the Giants at halfback. Linebacker Sam Huff was the star defensive player in a new defensive scheme cooked up by Defensive Coordinator Tom Landry. It was called the "4-3" which is still the most widely played defensive alignment in the NFL. The Giants offensive coordinator was Vince Lombardi. The offense was so good that future HoF wide receiver Don Maynard was a backup. Giants QB Charlie Conerly would go on to become the Marlboro Man in print and TV ads. Giants kicker Pat Sumemrall is a Hall of Fame announcer.

The Colts were led by the greatest QB of his (all?) time - Johnny Unitas. Their star receiver was Raymond Berry who was ahead of his time in terms of training and watching game films in preparation. Their head coach was Weeb Ewbank who is probably more famous for coaching the New York Jets in Super Bowl III (the one where Joe Namath guaranteed victory).

The Colts also had the greatest NFL raconteur of all-time. His name is Art Donovan, he's still alive and telling stories. My favortie Art Donovan story involves a shower stall in a hotel. While on a road trip, Donovan, Unitas and another player were admiring the huge bathroom in Unitas' hotel room. They notice that the shower stall was water tight. Donovan stops the drain, starts the water and close the shower door. When the water gets high enough, they all climb over the top of the stall and start swimming. It was big enough for three NFL players to swim around in. While they are in there someone kicks the door handle, the door opens and water rushes out into the bathroom and beyond. The hotel room was split level so there was a sunken area where the water pooled. The weight of the water collapsed the floor and flooded the room underneath. The hotel demanded that they pay for the damages or they would call the cops. Donovan and the other guy were broke so Unitas had to pay the bill.

Anyway, The Best Game Ever is a short book filled with entertaining and insightful profiles of the players and coaches of both teams as well as the place the NFL occupied in the national consciousness.

I'm currently reading For the Thrill of It by Simon Baatz. It's about the Leopold and Loeb murders in 1924 Chicago. This too is a fantastic but true story. Two gay lovers think they are supermen (in the Nietzschean sense of the word). They feel they are above the law and plan the perfect crime. The crime involves kidnapping and murdering Loeb's 14 year old cousin. Leopold and Loeb came from extremely wealthy families (Loeb's father was a vice president with Sears Roebuck). They hired famed trial lawyer Clarence Darrow for their defense. The year after the Leopold and Loeb trial, Darrow would try his most famous case, the Scopes Monkey Trial. I knew the basics of the case before starting the book but reading how sociopathic Leopold and Loeb were is chilling. As I was reading the pair's plan for recovering the ransom, I couldn't help but wonder if Akira Kurosawa's High and Low was inspired by Leopold and Loeb. I see that American crime writer Ed McBain wrote the novel (King's Ransom) that the film is based on.

I also caught the final performance of Quality of Life at the American Conservatory Theater. The play did not feature any of the ACT core acting company. The cast was rather well known. It included Laurie Metcalf (Roseanne), JoBeth Williams (Poltergeist), Steven Culp (Desperate Housewives), and Dennis Boutsikaris. The play was about two couples and their differing approaches to life and death. Metcalf & Williams play cousins; one from the Midwest and the other from Marin County). Metcalf's husband (Boutsikaris) is dying of cancer while Williams' daughter was murdered. Culp plays Williams' straight-laced husband. The play approaches death and the red state/blue state divide with humor and a deft touch. I could never quite figure out Metcalf's position which was to commit suicide with her husband. In the end, her character was talked out of it so that story line fell a little flat. Metcalf was a hoot in her spot on Berkeley inspired garb and ululating. I have seen women of her age wearing clothes like this...tie dye crossed with Indian sari.



As an aside, Culp starred in my all-time favorite Enterprise episode. I don't think I mentioned it on this blog but I am a Star Trek fan (I don't go to conventions or own a Star Fleet uniform). In particular, I was a fan of Enterprise; no doubt my interest was piqued by Jolene Blalock's portrayal of T'Pol in a tight bodysuit.

In the episode "Harbinger" (I had to look up the title), there are two plot lines that were fun to watch. Culp played a special forces type commander that is brought on board Enterprise to train its crew. I remember the unit is called MACO (the mako shark was their emblem). Culp and Dominic Keating, who played Enterprise Security Officer Malcolm Reed, butt heads (figuratively and literally) and eventually get into a knock-down, no holds barred fight. Later in that same episode, T'Pol and Trip (Connor Trinneer) banter like Dave and Maddie from Moonlighting before they engage in interspecies relations (photo below). There was also a great scene in the mess hall where Malcolm and Trip are teasing each other about his rumored relationship with T'Pol and his rivalry with Culp, respectively. I guess my inner Trekkie geek is showing.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving

On this day of thanks, I am thankful for all the great films I have been able to see this year.

Since my last post, I was able to see five films on my list and made one substitution.

The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival
Lola Montès - at the Castro
Vera Cruz - Robert Aldrich
The Last Sunset - Robert Aldrich
The Show Must Go On - Korean American Film Festival
Secret Sunshine - Korean American Film Festival

I saw Slumdog Millionaire at the Landmark Embarcadero yesterday.

I passed on The Show Must Go On because I had to get to the gym that day. I skipped the gym five days in a row (dinner one night and movies the other four). In addition, I realized I had a discount pass to the Roxie that is expiring on December 15. Last Saturday, I saw the Academy Award winning film The Times of Harvey Milk. This film won the Oscar in 1984 for Best Documentary.

The Times of Harvey Milk shouldn't be confused with Gus Van Sant's Milk (starring Sean Penn) which received an exclusive opening at the Castro Theater yesterday and opens nationally tomorrow.

Looking to 2009, The Blue Angel (1930) gets a revival screening at Berlin and Beyond. This classic film was directed by Josef von Sternberg and starred Marlene Dietrich). I've been a Dietrich fan for many years. One of my favorite films of all-time is Destry Rides Again with Dietrich (a German playing a character named Frenchy) and Jimmy Stewart. Dietrich sings a song called "Little Joe" that is great fun.

I'm inspired to list my five favorite Dietrich films:

1) Destry Rides Again

2) Shanghai Express co-starring Anna May Wong; there is a great scene on the train where a pious woman tries to save Dietrich and Wong from their wicked ways and they refuse her with some cutting comments.

3) The Scarlet Empress - I saw this film for the first time earlier this year at the Castro. Dietrich as Czarina Catherine the Great and directed by von Sternberg...need I say more?

4) A Touch of Evil - this film is called the greatest B film ever made and stars Orson Welles, Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh. Heston has black hair and a Mexican accent. Leigh gets drugged and gang raped by a gang of Mexican hoodlums while dykish Mercedes McCambridge watches. Welles chews up the scenery as a drunken, fat corrupt cop. Dietrich has a small role as gypsy fortune teller (in a black wig) that tells Welles to lay off the candy bars.

5) Rancho Notorious - directed by Fritz Lang. What I remember most about this film is that it has a God awful opening ballad. Most of the film takes place in a Western badlands called Chuck-a-Luck. I believe the ballad is called "The Legend of Chuck-a-Luck" - a story of rape, murder and revenge (actual lyrics). If you are good enough to write a catchy tune with the phrase Chuck-a-Luck then you are better songwriter than the one hired for Rancho Notorious.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Eleven Down

I am ten days into my 36 day movie marathon. I've already missed a few films.

The following list represents the portion of my list that have screened to date. I've seen the films not striked except Slumdog Millionaire.

The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival

I misread the Roxie schedule. Hounddog only had a two day run at the Roxie. I scanned the newspaper on November 13 looking for the start time only to discover it missing from the listing. It turns out, Hounddog only played November 7 and 8.

Hell's Ground started at 11 PM on Saturday, November 15 at the Third I Festival. I had already seen three films that day and was physically tired so I went home after the delightful Om Shanti Om.

Ganglamedo (Ganglande in the Chinese American Film Festival listing) shows at 4:20 today at the 4-Star but I won't be able to attend. I had planned on catching the 8:30 showing last night but I had a dinner meeting that ran long.

Slumdog Millionaire opened November 12 or 13 at the Landmark Embarcadero. I had planned on catching the November 16 showing at Third I but decided to watch Shanghai Red in that time slot. I plan on seeing Slumdog at the Embarcadero before November 26.

Speaking of Shanghai Red...I drove to the 4-Star on November 16 to catch the 9:55 PM showing. As I approached the ticket booth, I notice there was a sign saying the 9:55 showing was cancelled. So I took a half day of a vacation on November 19 to see Shanghai Red and Sparrow by Johnny To. Before the film, they announced that there were no English subtitles for the film. Most of the film was in Mandarin which is a language I am completely non-conversant. Having had a crush on Vivian Wu for many years (since The Last Emperor), I decided to stick it out. It turns out her character was an English translator and eventually married an American. About a fifth of the film was in English. I'm still not sure what happened. It turns out her husband was trying to kill her but he changed his mind and married her instead! Vivian kept putting on a tight red dress and sunglasses before killing men (her glasses must have been an homage to Dressed to Kill). Then it switched to Vivian in prison with a pixie haircut causing her lawyer to become flustered and discombobulated.

I also saw The Exiles at the San Francisco American Indian Film Festival. The film was great but the experience left a lot to be desired. First, the program consisted of five films with a total run time of approximately 3 hours. That is an unusally long program. The program started at 7 so I was hoping to be out just after 10 PM. Then the delays started. First, they were about 20 minutes late in starting. Next, they had the longest festival trailer/preview in history. They are usually 30 seconds or so. It seemed the SFAIFF one was 5 to 10 minutes. Then the festival director came out and talked for about 15 minutes. The worst part is that he basically thanked all the tribes, companies and individuals that were listed in the 5 minute trailer. Finally, the program started about 40 minutes late. After two or three short films totaling ~45 minutes, there was an intermission even though there was still over two hours of film left! I used the restroom at that point. When I came back the director of the first film (a 3 minute short called The Creation) was speaking. The director fielded questions for about 15 (5 times the length of his film). Finally, The Exiles screened for about 65 minutes. It ended after 10 PM. The final ~60 minute film in the program was A Shout into the Wind about indigenous people of Finland (Indians in Finland?). It looked interesting and the director was in the audience but I had to get up early the next morning so I left after the director made the introduction.

One of my pet peeves about film festivals is that they are notorious for starting late but this case was the most egregious disrepect for people's time. In this case, SFAIFF probably took more than 4.5 hours to screen 3 hours of film. SFAIFF - get your act together! Michael Smith (Festival Director and Founder) needs to bring the hammer down on his own soliloquy and get on with the show.

Monday, November 10, 2008

25 Gozinta 36

When I was a boy, I used to watch The Beverly Hillbillies on TV. Jethro was the educated one in the Clampett family. I think he made it through the 6th grade. He could do addition, subtraction, multiplication and gozintas. Gozintas? You know...2 gozinta 12 six times, 8 gozinta 64 eight times, etc.

Sometimes, I feel as confused as Jethro trying to attend all these fims that only have one or two screenings due to rep house or film festival schedules.

Starting on November 12, my goal is to attend movies on 25 out of next 36 days. That includes traveling for Thanksgiving. Among the festivals or retrospectives I will attempt to attend.

PFA's Cinema Japan
PFA's A Dirty Dozen: The Films of Robert Aldrich
2008 San Francisco International South Asian Film Festival (aka Third I Film Festival)
2008 San Francisco Korean American Film Festival
2008 Chinese American Film Festival
2008 American Indian Film Festival

My stretch goal, listed by film, is:

The Exiles - American Indian Film Festival
Hounddog - at the Roxie
A Throw of Dice - Third I
Maqbool - Third I
Om Shanti Om - Third I
Hell's Ground - Third I
The Glow of White Women - Third I
Slumdog Millionaire - Third I
The Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness - Cinema Japan
Vengeance Is Mine - Cinema Japan
The Passion of Joan of Arc - at the Castro
Shanghai Red - Chinese American Film Festival
Sparrow - Chinese American Film Festival
Gun of Mercy - Chinese American Film Festival
Ganglamedo - Chinese American Film Festival
Lola Montès - at the Castro
Vera Cruz - Robert Aldrich
The Last Sunset - Robert Aldrich
The Show Must Go On - Korean American Film Festival
Secret Sunshine - Korean American Film Festival
The Ceremony - Cinema Japan
The Big Knife - Robert Aldrich
Boy - Cinema Japan
Attack! - Robert Aldrich
Black Rain - Cinema Japan
Onibaba - Cinema Japan
The Garment Jungle - Robert Aldrich
The Killing of Sister George - Robert Aldrich
Tokyo Drifter - Cinema Japan
Violence at Noon - Cinema Japan
Ulzana’s Raid - Robert Aldrich
A Last Note - Cinema Japan
Where Spring Comes Late - Cinema Japan
Twilight’s Last Gleaming - Robert Aldrich
Intentions of Murder - Cinema Japan

I'm no Jethro Bodine but I count 35 films on my list. I'd like to see Quantum of Solace too. It has a run at the Balboa and I like to support them whenever I can. Make it an even 36 because even I can calculate 36 gozinta 36.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Phantom of the Opera at the Paramount Theater

I have to admit that I've never seen Phantom of the Opera. I haven't read the book by Gaston Leroux. I haven't seen the 1940's remake with Claude Rains. I haven't seen Andrew Lloyd Webber's stage adaptation. I haven't seen the 2004 film adaptation of Webber's musical.

When I saw that the 1925 silent version (starring Lon Chaney) was playing on Halloween at the Paramount Theater in Oakland, I thought I could kill two birds with one stone. I've never seen Phantom nor have I been in the Paramount.

After watching DocFest’s Bunnyland at the Shattuck in Berkeley, I took BART to Oakland. It was raining so I hoped that it wouldn’t be too crowded in the theater. It wasn’t crowded but there was good turnout. On the Paramount’s website, the seating capacity is listed at over 3000. I’m not good at estimating crowds but I wouldn’t be surprised if there were over 1,000 people in attendance.

Allow me to vent for a moment. I was sitting in the Orchestra Front Stage Right section. There was a woman in the Orchestra Front Center section. She was wearing earrings with blinking light. What the hell! Who wears blinking earrings to a movie theater? Prior to the show, I was wondering if she would turn them off when the film began. She kept the earrings blinking through the newsreel before the film! I was wondering what to do. They were in my line of sight and very distracting. Not an usher to be seen. I would have had to step over a dozen people to ask her to turn off her earrings. I could have yelled which is what I felt like doing but I was too meek. Thankfully, someone sitting in the row behind tapped her on the shoulder and asked her to turn them off. She politely obliged. I’ve never seen flashing earrings in a theater but a first cousin to them is cell phones. I hate when people check the time on the phone or even send text messages. The phone lights up like a beacon in a dark theater.

Back to the program…first was a newsreel about horses – trotting horse, fox hunts, female harness racers. I couldn’t get into it. That damn woman’s earrings! By the time she turned them off, the film was half over. The topic was not something that interested me though.

That was followed the cartoon which was Mysterious Mose, a Betty Boop/Bimbo film by the Fleischer Brothers. Bimbo was a cartoon dog that the Fleischers were trying to make a star out of. Indeed, Bimbo received above-the-title billing in this film even though Betty goes topless (she was scared out of her nightgown). Eventually, they found that Popeye and Betty Boop were more popular so Bimbo faded to the background.

The title may not be familiar but if you have watched films from or documentaries about the 1930’s, you may recognize the song. Like “Minnie the Moocher” by Cab Calloway, “Mysterious Mose” has a catchy refrain. You can view the cartoon on YouTube.

Then they brought the lights up and a man in a tuxedo and a woman (Bianca) in a tight gown rose from the orchestra pit on a mechanical platform. There was a roulette wheel between them. Bianca spun the wheel a few times and provided exaggerated spokesmodel gestures (imagine Barker’s Beauties from The Price is Right high on coke). Actually Bianca was quite entertaining. The numbers the wheel landed on corresponded to the last three digits of someone(s) ticket stubs. Winners received gift certificates to local restaurants.

Next up was organist Jim Riggs. He gave some historical notes about the film that I found interesting. The film was released three times in 1925. Carl Laemmle, founder of Universal Pictures, produced the film. The original version didn’t test well so they re-shot parts of the film to include some comedic elements. That version (which premiered at the Geary Theater in San Francisco - current home of the American Conservatory Theater) didn’t test well either. So a third version was shot which was the “final” version. In 1929, talkies were becoming the rage so Laemmle decided to re-release Phantom with sound. He re-filmed 40% of the film with some color film and a soundtrack. By 1929, Chaney was no longer under contract to Universal so the new footage didn’t include him. In 1929, many theaters had not installed a sound system so the re-release had a sound version and silent version. The silent version was the film the screened at the Paramount.

I’m familiar with the general plot of Phantom - psychotic musical genius lives in the underground passages beneath the Paris Opera House. He becomes infatuated with Christine, an apprentice singer. He helps her become a star. She is disgusted by his facial deformity. She plots an escape with her lover. The phantom discovers her plans and kidnaps her. From there, I’m little unclear what happens.

In the introduction, Riggs said the original version followed the novel. The Phantom dies after kissing Christine. In the version the screened, an angry mob chases the Phantom from his underground lair. They chase him through the streets of Paris before he jumps (presumably to his death) into the Seine. It was a very abrupt ending. The formula ending would have been that Christine’s love/kindness/beauty reforms the Phantom and he gives permission to Christine to marry her lover. Either the Phantom lives in peace afterwards or tragically dies as a result of past transgressions or misunderstanding.

In this version, the Phantom kidnaps Christine to marry her but is separated from her by the angry mob. The mob chases him and jumps in the river. There is no redemption scene. Christine never feels remorse for spurning the Phantom. The Phantom never sacrifices his love for Christine by letting her go. As a result, the film seems to end prematurely. I was disappointed in the film. Given the number of re-shoots, I can’t help but think the essence of the film was lost in the process. As for Chaney, his make-up was still ghoulish after 80 years. I preferred Chaney in The Unknown and The Unholy Three which I saw at the 2008 and 2006 San Francisco Silent Film Festivals, respectively.

The Paramount Theater was magnificent. It has an art deco exterior and a huge lobby. Once in the theater, there are bas-relief carvings on the walls. The motif switches to ancient Greek in the theater. The restrooms are in the basement, which has a huge lounge.

I been past the Paramount many time but never been inside. They have guided tours at 10 AM on the first and third Saturdays of each month. I’m going to try to take the tour one day. The cost is $5. That reminds me, the ticket price for Phantom was only $5 also. That is the cheapest evening showing I’ve seen in many years.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Final Thoughts on 2008 DocFest

As I previously wrote, Operation Filmmaker was my favorite film from the festival. The film follows Muthana Mohmed, an Iraqi film student. Actor Liev Schreiber (best known as Cotton Weary from Wes Craven’s Scream trilogy) is about to make his directorial debut in Everything is Illuminated. While watching MTV, he sees a short film about a Baghdad film school that was bombed out directed by Muthana. Schreiber is so moved by the film that he decides to hire Muthana to work on Everything is Illuminated. Schreiber sets in motion a tremendous upheaval in Muthana’s life on little more than a whim. It would seem that getting someone out of war-torn Baghdad is a no-brainer but Muthana will show that problems can arise in the most surprising situations. I am reminded of a Muslin or maybe Chinese proverb. It states that if you save someone’s life, you are responsible for that person for the rest of his life.

As a result of miscommunication, culture barriers, personality differences and geopolitics, Muthana trades one life of uncertainty for another. Let me count the ways – Schreiber and the producers of Everything is Illuminated don’t really have a defined job for Muthana so he is thrown from one task to another. Muthana comes from a privileged background so some of the tasks seem beneath him. My impression was that he thought he would do something akin to co-directing the film. Instead, he is making coffee, photocopying and editing the wrap party blooper reel. To be fair, Muthana doesn’t really seem to know what he wants. As the film progresses, Muthana sole desire seems to be to avoid returning to Iraq. He also makes the unpardonable faux pas of stating his admiration of George W. Bush to Hollywood based co-workers.

Everything is Illuminated was filmed near Prague in the Czech Republic. When the film wraps, he scrambles to get his Visa extended. His colleagues are flabbergasted that he has waited until the last minute to obtain a visa. By then, he has worn out his welcome with the crew of Everything is Illuminated. He comes off as opportunistic and lazy as well as strangely passive about his own decisions that have major impacts on his life. Through some luck and help, he gets his visa extended and lands a job on the crew of Doom (starring Dwayne Johnson aka The Rock).

The director of Operation Filmmaker is Nina Davenport who was hired by the producers of Everything is Illuminated to document Muthana’s experience. After the filming ends, Davenport stays in Prague to continue filming Muthana. As I mentioned in the previous post, this is where Davenport begins to enable Muthana’s questionable decisions by giving him money and other aid. In the context of normal existence, Muthana’s behavior is self-serving at best and borderline dishonesty. However, Muthana is receiving repeated messages from his family that under no circumstances is he to return home because it is too dangerous. What is one to do if returning home means death?

Muthana applies for film school in London and is accepted. Having no money, he asks The Rock to donate money for his tuition expenses. To Muthana’s credit, he has an upbeat personality and remains mostly congenial on the sets of Everything is Illuminated and Doom. Through an intermediary, The Rock turns him down. I thought this was very cruel prank to play on Muthana. In reality, The Rock will sponsor Muthana but it seems like he wants it to be a surprise or documented on film.

Muthana’s life continues its trajectory in London with Davenport there to film it all. Muthana is out of money, he isn’t doing so great in film school and he seems to prefer handouts to getting a job. By this point in the journey which must be 2 to 3 years after we first meet Muthana, he is becoming irritable at being followed around by a video camera, never having money and the deteriorating conditions in Iraq. He begins to lash out (even physically) at Davenport. By this point in the film, Davenport has moved beyond enabler and seems to have entered into a dysfunctional codependency with Muthana.

By this point, I was very ambivalent about Muthana. He had behaved in a way that would have frustrated me but I couldn’t bring myself to dislike him. I was always aware that his country was occupied and returning home could mean death. Still, Muthana didn’t seem to make his situation any easier on himself. It seems he didn’t have the life skills to succeed as a result of immaturity or cultural differences. Then again, he was plucked from Baghdad, dropped in Prague without a support system and made his way to London with barely a pound in his pocket. I can’t help but wonder what Muthana is doing now and how often Davenport is in touch with him or still supporting him.

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DocFest screened two United Nations Association Film Festival (UNAFF) programs. Two of the worst films from DocFest were UNAFF films. In the interest of full disclosure, I am not a big fan of the UN. I think it is one of the most ineffective organizations in the world. I’m not sure how UNAFF is affiliated with the UN but to put the UN brand in the festival name says something about the festival organizers. Belonging can be summarized as The Idiot’s Guide to An Inconvenient Truth. Like the UN, the film was a dollar short and a day late. I can’t fully criticize the film because I slept through the middle portion.

However bad belonging was, Megalopolis was even worse. Incoherent and lumbering are the adjectives I would use (for the film and the UN). The basic message was that large cities cause poverty and crime. I guess people in rural areas are wealthy and don’t break the law. The film skips around the globe to Japanese Goth girls, a Brazilian whore, Chinese nouveau riche , Los Angeles Sheriff Department employees, a Cairo garbageman, some people in Karachi and many more. This film set the 2008 record for most walkouts. I took a powder enduring over two hours of Megalopolis.

I beg DocFest to ban UNAFF programs from the festival in the future. I wrote a diatribe on the back of my ballot but there were no volunteers collecting them. Undoubtedly, they had assumed the film was over given mass exodus that occurred throughout the preceding two hours.

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When viewing films in a theater, I frequently feel out of step with society (particularly San Francisco society). I felt this quite acutely after viewing Going on 13. The film follows four Bay Area girls from ages 9 to 13. The girls appear to come from lower socioeconomic levels and according to the copy, they were “urban girls of color.” Ariana was African American, Isha was Indian American, Esme was Latina and I guess Rosie was Latina too. I didn’t find their growing pains that painful. None of their families seemed to be hurting too much for money. They all had loving parents (I think Rosie came from a single parent home).

They had issues like any pre-teen. Rosie in particular seemed to be at risk. She was often truant from school and seemed to have trouble socializing. She spent a lot of time in solitude at the library reading dark poems (I think she recited an Emily Dickinson poem). However, she had a very patient mother and is clearly intelligent. Ariana was a tomboy whose father and stepfather were absent. She seemed to have trouble interacting with boys. Esme was overweight. Isha had American sensibilities but strict Indian parents.

The film was poignant but nothing life-changing happened over the course of the four years for the girls. It was entertaining peek into the tribulations of growing up. However, after the film, Esme and Ariana were in the audience and took questions along with directors Dawn Valadez and Kristy Guevara-Flanagan. I think the girls are 17 now. Both seemed more poised and mature which is what you would expect when comparing 17 year olds to 9-13 year olds.

People in the audience kept telling Esme and Ariana that they were inspirational and role models. Both girls said they didn’t feel like role models. I think Esme said “I just grew up.” Out of the mouth of babes… Children are very resilient and given a stable parent, I think most kids turn out fine. We all have our foibles and shortcomings but the act of growing up should not be cause of inspiration.

My criticism of the audience’s questions or nonchalance about growing up should not be interpreted negatively w.r.t. the film. The film provided an entertaining glimpse into four girls’ lives. There were funny moments, sad moments, happy moments, etc. – just like life itself.

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Over My Dad’s Body was a fascinating mystery. Director Taliya Finkel’s father claims his brother (her uncle) is a Soviet spy. Shmuel Finkel emigrated from the Ukraine to Israel. His younger brother, Sterik, was in prison at the time. A few years later, Sterik immigrated to Israel also but Shmuel suspects the man claiming to be his brother is an imposter sent by the KGB to spy in Israel. Outlandish claim? Certainly but the KGB was known to do outlandish things. Wouldn’t a man recognize his own brother? Prison can change a man. Maybe there is some validity to Shmuel’s claim. It’s hard to believe him because he is a diagnosed schizophrenic. His ex-wife and three daughters are dubious although Taliya is the least dubious.

The film follows Taliya as she investigates her father’s claims in Israel and Ukraine. Proof is hard to come by in the Byzantine former Soviet state and Shmuel’s mental problem cloud opinions of him in Israel. Shmuel’s death adds a sense of urgency to her investigation. Sterik was the last person to see him alive. The cause of his death is strange. Sterik won’t speak on camera and his face is always blurred out. The capstone is the letter from the Israeli government stating that Shmuel had served his country but for security reasons, they could not disclose specifics.

The film leaves Shmuel’s claims open to interpretation but rather than being unsatisfying, it is in keeping with the man’s life and his family’s own unanswered questions.

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Elvis in East Peoria - A petty, insecure woman hooks up with a shady, ex-minister cum Elvis impersonator and their pathetically funny but sad journey starts. The film is filled with Elvis songs so this film will probably not get distributed. Too bad, this was laugh, cry, shake your in disbelief film.

Chasing the Devil - This film was an expose on the ex-Gay movement. What does ex-Gay mean? There are reparative therapy programs to teach gay men to be straight. Some (many?) programs are run by charlatans and Christian fundamentalists. The most successful one (he appeared on Jimmy Kimmel) was a Moonie. One person involuntarily flicks his tongue throughout the film. That is a side effect of long-term use of psychiatric drugs.

Come on Down! - Who knew the lengths people will go to get on The Price is Right? Who knew Bob Barker had a gay following?

Enlighten Up! - This film is all about taking a yoga neophyte and transforming him via yoga. They visited master yogis in the US and India but no two people could explain yoga’s secrets the same way. There is something about “practice, practice, practice.” Also, it’s not what you do, it’s why you do it. I don’t think Nick Rosen understood yoga any better after the film and neither do I. It was fun to watch him try. For record, I am not a yoga practitioner. I think stretching and breathing train your body and mind. In particular, it focuses your mind on the body. By practicing repeatedly, the body movements are no longer fully controlled from the mind but rather from muscle memory. That allows the mind to seek or be receptive to other inputs which is the so-called transformation.