Friday, December 30, 2011

Re-cap-ola

I thought I would jump on the list-journalism band-wagon that rolls around the world at this time of year and offer a list of films that have left a big impression on me in 2011.  In no particular order (of course)...

Mr. Thank You - Hiroshi Shimizu


God's Country - Louis Malle


Wagon Master - John Ford


Xiao Wu - Jia Zhang-ke


Werckmeister Harmonies - Bela Tarr


The Green Ray - Eric Rohmer


The Last Holiday - Henry Cass


Uncle Boonmee who can Recall his Past Lives - Apichatpong Weerasthakul


Through the Olive Trees - Abbas Kiarostami


In Vanda's Room - Pedro Costa


Notre Musique - Jean-Luc Godard


The Seahorse - Jean Painleve


The Hole - Tsai Ming-Liang


The Human Condition - Masaki Kobayashi


I'd love to hear some titles from all of you.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Hou

Flowers of Shanghai

After watching Flowers of Shanghai this week, I've been thinking a lot about Hou Hsiao-Hsien.  The first film of his that I saw was Cafe Lumiere, which is sort of a tribute to Ozu, and I've slowly grown more and more interested and become more and more impressed.  Initially I liked the way that he dealt with time and pace, but it took a long time for me to get comfortable with it.  They aren't movies that you rave about, they are movies that you want to spend time with.  I'm not sure it is about 'getting' them, as much as just getting in touch with what you are actually seeing and hearing, maybe finding your spot in the scene or waiting for something in you to be triggered.

Millenium Mambo

To me what is special about his films is the way that it feels like you are experiencing it yourself, but with some indefinable extra sense.  Sometimes you aren't even sure that a scene or a film showed you anything significant at all, but then it pops up in your mind days or weeks later and won't go away.  I wish I could find a clip that would do some justice to what I'm trying to talk about, but maybe my lack of success in finding one is all too appropriate for this post.  So here are some stills instead.

Cafe Lumiere

Goodbye South, Goodbye