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FilmCouch #67 - Wisdom of Kumar

April 25th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

Paul interviews Kal Penn (Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay, opening tonight), which inadvertently pushes Paul & Kevin on to a road trip–metaphoricaly speaking–from a Whites Only saloon in the old west to the ghettos of Canada where a mathematician is changing the world and a legendary filmmaker brings them to enlightenment.

(Also under discussion EMPz 4 Life)

(Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday)

FilmCouch #67 - Wisdom of Kumar

*Note: The phone number announced in the show has technical problems. If you want to leave a message, call:

1-800-749-0632
Channel: 8838
Password: 1111

Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay, EMPz 4 Life

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Tribeca 2008: Standard Operating Procedure & Conversation with Errol Morris

April 25th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

The night before Sony Pictures Classics planned to open Errol Morris’ Abu Ghraib doc Standard Operating Procedure in two theaters the Tribeca Film Festival hosted a screening of the film, followed by a conversation between Morris and Jarhead author Anthony Swofford.

Beat to the festival circuit by over a year by Rory Kennedy’s Ghosts of Abu Ghraib (which debuted at Sundance 2007 and later screened on HBO), Morris’ two-hour dissection of the Iraqi prison schedule retreads a fair bit of ground that will be familiar to anyone who has followed the scandal closely and/or seen the previous film. But where Kennedy was primarily concerned with depicting the psychological climate that led to the abuses (of both detainees and power) and their photographic documentation, Morris is more concerned with revealing the discrepancy between what those iconic photographs seem to be documenting, and what the testimony of the indicted soldiers suggests is closer to the truth. “We looked at the photographs and thought we knew everything about Abu Ghraib,” Morris said after the screening. “We knew nothing.” Of course, Morris has made a living crafting subjective mediations of reality, and formally Standard Operating Procedure is an embodiment of the problematic relationship between representation and interpretation that underlies his thesis. High-contrast, hyper-shallow focus re-enactments (Morris prefers the word “illustrations”) compete for space with actual images from the prison, set in the middle of the screen so we can see their original framing. Low-res cell cam videos are are also left their original size, and in the case of the footage documenting the infamous “human pyramid,” the video appears as a flickering doorway taking up about a fifth of an otherwise black screen. Throughout, Morris uses the cinematic language of fantasy films––including a score by Danny Elfman, strategic CGI compositing and slow motion effects––in order to sell the feeling that we’re trapped in a nightmare, familiar in its photorealism and yet, in terms of what’s actually seen and what we read it to mean, surreal.

Morris is particularly concerned with how the information contained in individual photographs led to indictment of the soldiers involved––both in terms of criminal charges and in the court of public opinion––as well as the fact that if there wouldn’t have been a “scandal” as such if the photos hadn’t existed. An Army investigator charged with considering the images as evidence is given ample screen time, and his explanation of how and why some photographs were considered more damning than others is fascinating. The image of a hooded detainee with wires attached to his finger, though probably the most iconic image of the scandal on the whole, shows no sign of anything criminally untoward––in the investigation, it was classified as evidence of “S.O.P.”, or Standard Operating Procedure. Meanwhile, the image of Lynndie England pointing to a masturbating soldier seems to depict a coerced sexual act, and was thus considered evidence of a crime.

England is now just 25, but as Swofford noted, she’s come out of this ordeal (and three years in prison) looking “like she’s aged a decade” compared to the girl in that photograph. Though vilified in the media for her cheerful presence in many of the most damning photos from Abu Ghraib, England maintains that her crimes were spawned by passion. “I was blinded by being in love with a man,” England laments in the film––not sentimentally, but tough and resigned, like a Loretta Lynn song come to life.

Throughout, Morris contrasts photos taken by the soldiers of one another with their photos documenting their treatment of the detainees, and in several of the former, England is frozen in poses that would be nearly indistinguishable from photos compromising activity involving detainees…were she not young, white and female. When we see England hand cuffed in a sprawl on a cot, or squatting with her pants around her knees and a middle finger raised to the camera, knowing that these images were taken by her then-boyfriend Sargeant Charles Graner, we understand that she’s the middle link in a chain of humiliation. Every soldier who served time in relation to the scandal says they were just following orders from their commanding officer, but England, a love-struck 20 year old in way over her head in every respect, was taking orders from the man she was sleeping with. The infamous human pyramid of naked detainees? England says Graner referred to it as his “birthday present” to her.

This was before England found out she was pregnant and learned that Graner was also sleeping with Meghan Ambuhl, another female officer at the prison. Now serving a ten year prison sentence, Graner is currently married to Ambuhl, who appears in both Kennedy and Morris’ films. Mrs. Graner also appeared off to the side in the original image of England holding a leash attached to a detainee, but she had been cropped out by Graner by the time the image made it to the media.

If anything, this psycho-sexual drama is underplayed in Morris’ film. One could easily image a full feature on how the Graner/England/Ambul love triangle––and particularly Graner’s fetishistic impulse to obtain photographic evidence of the younger of his two girlfriends in situations of humiliation––was fueled by the stresses of the war and the prison and in turn snowballed into a serious black mark on America’s record of military professionalism. Morris sacrifices analysis of this and other provocative ideas naturally embedded in the story, in order to keep the focus on the way the story has been told through imagery. This analysis is often so wonkily specific that it can sometimes lose the forest for miniscule trees.

Nonetheless, Morris indicated after the screening that the sex and gender issues raised by England’s aspect of the story was at the forefront of his concern. “I’ve often seen this war as a war of sexual humiliation,” he said, “It’s no accident that American women were used to strip Iraqi males. To me, it’s no accident that Graner took his 90 pound girlfriend, who is 20 years old, and took THIS picture.” In the film, England takes responsibility for falling for the wrong man, but she also takes every opportunity to blame her complicity in the crimes on the coupling. Under Morris’ gaze, England isn’t a morally reprehensible bad apple, or even a woman who made bad choices based on romantic obsession, but a victim.

So is Sabrina Harman, a female soldier seen in another iconic Abu Ghraib image, giving the camera a thumbs up next to a corpse. Morris says that when he first saw that image, his knee-jerk reaction was to assume that Harmon “was a monster…maybe even responsible [for the death].” He later learned that Harmon was an aspiring forensic photographer, and that after taking a single photo of herself in front of the body of a detainee accidentally killed during an interrogation by a CIA agent when she was not present, she proceeded to take dozens of evidentiary-style photos of the corpse. Morris says he’s about to publish an entire essay on “Sabrina and the smile” on his New York Times blog, which will include an interview with “the greatest living expert on the smile.” I hope this essay gives greater consideration to why the budding forensic photographer saw fit to document herself as a gleeful tourist at the crime scene; Harman’s explanation that her thumb reflexively popped up because she “never knows what to do with my hands in pictures” didn’t quite do it for me.

Morris’ persistently insists, both within the film and in the conversation afterwards, that those who participated in the abuses and photographed them (and served time for their actions) are virtually without culpability compared to the higher-ups who, at best, created a culture of Geneva Convention indifference, and at worst, ordered torture and then pretended like they didn’t know it was happening when the photographs came to light. The idea that there would not have been an Abu Ghraib scandal had the photographs not made it to the media is one thing; the idea that the human beings who appear in those photographs are not responsible for their own actions is another. Such suggestions hold particularly little water when it comes to people like England and Harman, who continually prove themselves on screen to be tangled masses of impulse vs. intellect; to write their actions off as products of the frustrations of working in a male military culture is both condescending and too generous.

Standard Operation Procedure frustrates more than it enlightens, but to hear Morris tell it, that’s part of the plan. “It’s not a movie that can provide an answer to every question––far from it,” he said towards the end of last night’s chat. “It’s a movie that raises questions, and if I’ve done that, I’ve done my job.”

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FilmCouch #66 - Care Bears and Iraq

April 18th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

When a laugh is more powerful than a tear. The Care Bears Big Wish Movie, Where in the World is Osama bin Laden? and, possibly, Iron Man share a common theme. A quiet–almost subliminal appeal–to an audience seeking a straight shot of entertainment asking them to drop apathy and get involved in a troubled world. A new subversive cinema (that I wrote about earlier this week), which isn’t a filmmaker sneaking a message past Hollywood executives, but past a message-weary audience.

(Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday)

filmcouch-66
Where in the World is Osama bin Laden?, Iron Man, Care Bears Big Wish Movie

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Moving Image Institute: The Deal

April 17th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

Over our five days at the Institute, we kept returning to a series of binary oppositions: print versus online; doing it for the passion versus doing it for the pay; criticism as consumer reporting versus advocacy for artists. With such circular questions, it’s hard to get anywhere, making it easy to lapse into what filmmaker Kelly Reichardt jokingly referred to at one point as “glass half full of shit” thinking. But out of the morass of questions and unresolvable clashes came an emphasis on compromise and balance: nearly every guest speaker made some mention of making trade offs, of covering for noble failures with less-noble successes.

This seemed most prevalent on Saturday, with Reichardt and Tom Kalin’s independent filmmaker panel; Ryan Werner of IFC and Don Krim from KINO representing indie distribution; and, particularly, the online film criticism panel, featuring Eugene Hernandez (indieWIRE), Michael Koresky (Reverse Shot), Matt Zoller Seitz (The House Next Door and The New York Times) and Stu Van Airsdale (The Reeler and Defamer).

The issue of blogs as an alternative/corrective to the mainstream media came up early in the day, with Seitz’s explanation for how The House Next Door got started. “I was really irritated by the negative reviews of Terrence Malick’s The New World,” he said, “And I just wanted to write about how great it was like every day.”

Though Matt experimented with Google and Amazon’s ad programs, both “were just a pain in the ass to maintain,” and The House Next Door evolved into a not-for-profit clearinghouse for mostly-serious material that an interested community of professional and amateur writers wouldn’t be able to publish elsewhere. It’s an employed film critic’s outlet for non-commercial writing, but it’s also an effort to create a greater balance in the types of voices that get to weigh in on film culture. But to established print critics who whisper to him in confidence that they’d love to have an outlet to write the kind of stuff that appears daily, for no compensation, on The House Next Door, Seitz has no sympathy. “Where do you get off with your sense of superiority, Print, if you constrain your writers in a way that [blogs] don’t?”

Seitz says what’s happening online is not in opposition to journalism––it’s returning journalism to what it should be. “Blogs have returned human communication to its natural state,” he said. “Journalism has been a white collar profession for about 20 years now, and it didn’t used to be…a lot of the defense that critics feel has to do with impoliteness.”

Of course, in a session just the day before, the lead critic of the New York Times had all but loosened his tie in discomfort at the very mention of the blogosphere, with the stated problem being comment section vitriol. Seitz referred to this factor as “Assholism,” in regards to which he shrugged, “There are certain people who only exist to show up on websites in order to tell you what an idiot you are.” He compared the blog space to high school debate: even though arguments get vicious, “there are rules, and you don’t take it personally.”

Newly-minted Defamer Stu VanAirsdale, who usually keeps at least part of a foot in the mainstream print world, concurred. “Blogs are famously kind of a caustic environment. I’m honest, maybe to a fault, but if something’s bullshit, I’m going to say it’s bullshit. That doesn’t mean I’m right, it just means I have an opinion. The print loyalty is absolutely afraid of that dialogue, and they can’t conceive of a world where they’d have to defend themselves.”

Stu noted that he had been hired to inject a sense of film culture into Defamer, a site maybe best known for posting images of Tom Cruise jumping on Oprah’s couch, captured by former editor Mark Lisanti with cellphone cam pointed at his TV. Such successes for the site have apparently been few and far between of late, and with Defamer traffic down over the past twelve months, Stu noted that his talents were seen as desirable because they could potentially attract a new audience. One of my fellow Institute fellows, New York Magazine blogger Dan Kois, expressed surprise that famously lowest common denominator-mad Defamer publisher Nick Denton would consider deeper content as a viable traffic raising solution. But as Stu pointed out, the site already has the celeb sex tape beat covered by other writers. With that steady stream of traffic taken care of, Defamer can afford to take a risk on someone like Stu, presumably in the hopes of attracting a wider audience.

Over and over again, these discussions came back to compromise. Tom Kalin needed to cast an actress of Julianne Moore’s caliber in order to get funding for his incest-infused true crime movie Savage Grace; Julianne Moore can only make Savage Grace because she pays both her own mortgage and rent on her stardom/bankability by making movies like Next. Filmmakers care primarily about their movies seeing theatrical release, but as Ryan Werner pointed out, VOD is a new revenue stream that can not only support the cost of a theatrical release, but it supports long-term word of mouth for all ancillaries. Seitz even talked about bargaining with an editor at the Newark Star-Ledger: he’d get to do an interview he really wanted to do, if he interviewed Jerry Springer as well.

In my first post about attending the Institute, I mentioned something about how I was heading to Queens to confront an existential void. I can’t say that the future looks appreciably less murky just yet, although maybe it will when it dust settles a bit. At least I know I have one thing to look forward to: a never-ending series of deals with devils. Maybe it’s not “you scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours”; maybe it’s more like “if you let me scratch your eyes out, I’ll make it worth your while.” Does it matter, as long as the rent gets paid?

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FilmCouch #65 Indiewood mashup

April 11th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

teh visitor carson mell

If you’re visiting a theater and tired of the same old movie clichés, conventional wisdom would point you to the independent movie selection. However, a string on indiewood flicks–most recently The Visitor (opening tonight)–are caving in on their own “indie” clichés. Like rogue environmentalists tracking an invasive species in an Appalachian creek bed, we digest their ways and spew out some indiewood movie pitches of our own.

As a palette cleanser, we talk to Carson Mell. We formed a crush on him last week watching Wholphin DVD No. 5. His sharp wit and creativity are on display in his short animation, Chonto.

filmcouch-65

(Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday)

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FilmCouch #64

April 4th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Art, Movie news

phillipe-chonto

Iraq fatigue: the conventional wisdom settled on in the last year that nobody wants to go to a movie theater for an Iraq war movie (most recently: Stop-Loss). Is it a new phenomenon or are all movies questioning war during wartime doomed to financial failure?

The new Wholphin quarterly DVD magazine is out. It’s probably the best curated source for short films outside a major festival and we give it the attention its due on FilmCouch.

FilmCouch 64

(Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store and an episode will download each Friday)

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