One of the many upsides to living in a beautiful city like Vancouver (besides the freshest tap water this side of the Pacific Ocean) is that it holds one of the five biggest film festivals in North America. The Vancouver International Film Festival opens today. About 640 screenings of the 360 films to come from eighty countries will be shown over the next sixteen days (October 1 – October 16). That means we Vancouverites and visiting film buffs can see movies as far as award-winners at Cannes, Telluride (TIFF), et al. to those that will never get distribution here. Without the interference of a ratings board, anything goes. Along Granville Street, and from Seymore to Howe, the cinemas are our roller coasters, our bumper cars, our Tilt-A-Whirls. It’s a good comparison seeing as how the line-ups won’t be any different.
I am still disheartened that Todd Solondz’s Life During Wartime (2009), a semi-sequel to his wonderful Happiness (1998), is not playing in the festival. After it played last month at Telluride to a very warm reception, Life During Wartime didn’t get distribution like so many others. Unless Solondz distributes it himself or keeps selling to those willing to take a risk (Hello Lions Gate Films!), it might be a long while to view. On the bright side, the Coen Brothers’ new film A Serious Man will have a Sunday morning sneak preview at the Park Theatre on October 11 before opening nationwide on October 16. The Coen film, unlike Telluride, will not be part of the VIFF. I am catching the Sunday screening so for me, it is part of the festival.
February 09, 2009 |Commentary, News|By Christopher Beaubien
Before becoming the next best thing to the likes of film composer Danny Elfman, Shirley Walker made her mark as a conductor for a few renowned films such as Randa Haine’s Children of a Lesser God (1986) and Jonathan Kaplan’s The Accused (1988). Her greatness was matched by the production of Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now (1979) as her first gig in Hollywood. On the Internet Movie Database, Walker is listed as a synthesizer musician in the film’s music department. The original music credit goes to its director (listed as Francis Coppola) and his father Carmine Coppola. Coppola’s wife, Eleanor, was too busy documenting its production with stunning material that would later become Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse (1991), written and directed by Fax Bahr and George Hickenlooper who also made the wonderful film, The Man From Elysian Fields (2001). Like Werner Herzog’s Fitzcarraldo (1982) and its accompanying documentary Burden of Dreams (1982), Hearts of Darkness presents the production as harrowing an experience as Apocalypse Now.
2008 was a year to be a fan of Batman; not only did The Dark Knight raise the bar of action pictures involving anti-heroes, but after over a dozen years of waiting, some of the exemplary score from Batman: The Animated Series (1992-1995) was finally released on commercially sold CDs. This first volume is an accumulation of music by head composer Shirley Walker and collaborations by the equally good musicians Lolita Aitmanis and Michael McCuistion. Yes, I bought one of the three-thousand limited releases and it has a place of honor in my office. I investigated Shirley Walker’s 1979 case after reading this excerpt from the collectible booklet included with the soundtrack:
In the 1970’s, Walker began scoring industrial films and jingles while continuing to play as apianist with a variety of orchestras. With one of the Bay’s hotbeds of creativity being Francis Ford Coppola’s American Zoetrope Studios, Walker’s notoriety would see her join the musical team of the writer-director’s Apocalypse Now in 1979. Her synth playing was a major factor in helping Coppola’s father Carmine realize Apocalypse Now’s acid rock groove, and Walker would re-team with Carmine that same year for The Black Stallion, charging to the rescue with additional music for the Coppola-produced family classic.
-Daniel Schweiger, a soundtrack editor for iFmagazine.com and Venice Magazine.
Exhibit A:
“You’re in the asshole of the world, Captain!”
My favorite twenty seconds of Apocalypse Now’s entirety is comprised from 2:59 to 3:19 in the following Do Long Bridge sequence. Captain Benjamin L. Willard (Martin Sheen) and his acid-tripping soldier Lance B. Johnson (Sam Bottoms) march across the wire-protruding, burnt-black terrain erupting with explosions of hellfire. From the center of a shooting post, descending lines of light bulbs stretch beyond the inky background and toward the frame panning horizontally to the right. Accompanying the commands, screams and growls on the soundtrack, the surrealistic music kicks in and drowns out the noise, effectively smothering it. The best way to describe the music would be like a carnival pavilion vomiting bile and severed elephant parts. If I died and heard this music, then I will know that I am really in Heaven. I love this music!
Exhibit B:
At this point of The Clock King episode, Batman is locked in a bank vault rigged to suck all of the oxygen from the room. Nearly unconscious, Batman’s point-of-view reveals a digital read-out box from a distance going in and out of focus as opposed to the steel door of the vault. Starting at 4:21 of episode track (not included on the CD…the next one, maybe?), listen for blaring synthesizers from 4:26 to 4:31. Sound familiar? The achieved effect of those nauseous sounds is identical to those used for the Apocalypse Now track. My conclusion is that Shirley Walker is directly responsible for why I regard that scene of Coppola’s film so highly.
Listening to those inspired, sinister tracks from Batman: The Animated Series always brings me back to my childhood. Where else has a theme for Batgirl (4:22 – 5:11) sounded so celebratory, bouncy, rousing and yet threatening? Okay, that is the music I want to hear before those illusory golden gates open before me. What other music makes the Joker (1:43 – 2:35) sound like a balance between lunacy and satanic hedonism? I refer to this soundtrack release as Volume One because there is a big demand for the rest out of the sixty-five episodes of the series. I want to listen to a pure orchestrate of virginal tracks from episodes ranging from Read My Lips, Mudslide, and Shadow of the Bat to House of Garden, Harlequinade, and BabyDoll. Oh, and I haven’t forgotten about the music from The New Batman Adventures (1997-1999), like Over The Edge, Growing Pains, and Mad Love. Surely, about a dozen more volumes isn’t out of the question. So far the first release is an excellent start on part of its producers to do justice to the late, great Shirley Walker.
We were spoiled by last year’s Oscar telecast. It didn’t feel that way at the time, but after going through the slough of nominations deemed safe by the Academy of Motion Pictures, a year where NoCountry For Old Men (2007) took home the big kahuna is looking more lustrous. Amidst the categories is a rigid formula of regularity that just strengthens my conspiracy that the Oscar voters are in cahoots with The Sandman. Some of nominees are deserving, but many of them have been preordained by the death of a thousand cuts that film pundits call Oscar Buzz.
Mind you, I’m writing this with a little tongue in cheek. If the few deserving nominees were absent from the categories, it would be disappointing despite how much news preordained the suspense out like a strangled balloon. Looking at the Best Actor nominees alone, four out of five great choices is not bad. Other categories are not as kind. This is the first out of two think-pieces about the 81st Annual Academy Award Nominations.
Best Picture
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Ceán Chaffin, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall Frost|Nixon (2008): Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Eric Fellner Milk (2008): Bruce Cohen, Dan Jinks (they won for American Beauty in 1999) The Reader (2008): Anthony Minghella, Sydney Pollack, Donna Gigliotti, Redmond Morris Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Christian Colson
Out of all the nominees, my favorite is this year’s dark horse: Milk.
The wasp in the honeycomb hairdo this year is The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. If those films represented a hand of cards in a poker game, then I would have dropped Benjamin Button faster than you can ask “Why in Hollywood is The Curious Case of Benjamin Button nominated for Best Picture?“
This year we lost two wonderful filmmakers who were also two of the four producers nominated for The Reader: Anthony Minghella (The Talented Mr. Ripley, 1999) and Sydney Pollack (Tootsie, 1982).
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role
Richard Jenkins for The Visitor (2007) Mickey Rourke for The Wrestler (2008) Frank Langella for Frost\Nixon (2008) Brad Pitt for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) Sean Penn for Milk (2008)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role
Anne Hathaway for Rachel Getting Married (2008) Kate Winslet for The Reader (2008) Meryl Streep for Doubt (2008) Melissa Leo for Frozen River (2008) Angelina Jolie for Changeling (2008)
Considering Anne Hathaway’s remarkable turn as the pitiable, impassioned drug-use recoverer Kim, only her title role in Barbera Kopple’s Havoc (2005) hinted at the searing intensity that was all too convincing in Jonathan Demme’s Rachel Getting Married. There are two likely paths Hathaway could follow with her win. One is the same route as her co-star Kate Hudson from the misogynistic Bride Wars (2009): an Oscar winner (Almost Famous, 2002) with a long line of shallow romantic comedies and no redeeming feature films afterward. The other path is the Hilary Swank one; she’ll win two Oscars (Boys Don’t Cry, 1999 and Million Dollar Baby, 2004) years later. Both times she’ll beat the same actress over the prize – imagine Annette Bening puncturing needles into a Swank voodoo doll.
If Kate Winslet should win, she is obligated to deliver her Oscar speech as a continuation of her character “Kate Winslet” from the Ricky Gervais Hollywood satire Extras. In that episode, “Winslet” claims she is doing the Holocaust picture to win herself an easy Oscar despite the surplus amount of such films: “We get it! It was grim. Move on.” Art imitates life and vice versa.
“I would like to thank the Academy for being oh so predictable. I don’t have to be a fortune teller to read the likes of you! A few years ago, I televised my plans to secure my very own golden, bald man on the BBC: ‘Starring in a Holocaust film equals Oscar!’ I stand before you fearlessly knowing that there is no risk of me never getting nominated again because I am a bloody great actress. You can’t help yourselves. You’ve nominated me six times and you’re going do a dozen more times! When my Oscar-holding husband and I go home tonight, we are going to play ‘Academy Wars’ and wrestling our statues for hours. Time: Minute and a half! Smell it, Streep! Kisses!”
It would be wonderful to see Melissa Leo, a hard-working character actor take the gold for her work in Courtney Hunt’s Frozen River. She played Ray, a tough, poverty-stricken mother struggling to improve the welfare of her children’s livelihood. Not only is her loathsome boss at the Dollar Store doling out part-time work like it were crumbs, her runaway husband is also gambling their life savings away. Through a bizarre circumstance (“You shouldn’t have left your keys in the car.”), Ray comes across an equally desperate Mohawk mother named Lila (Misty Upham) whose mother has kidnapped her baby – an encounter in a restaurant where Lila helplessly stands by is hard to watch. To escape financial ruin, Lila gets Ray involved in smuggling immigrants across the boarder from Canada. The illegal venture is extraordinarily dangerous, where misunderstandings turn sickening: Ray abandons a packed bag in the snow fearing that East Indian couple were harboring weapons, she regrets it later. This performance is a fully explored one.
Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role
Josh Brolin for Milk (2008) Michael Shannon for Revolutionary Road (2008) Heath Ledger for The Dark Knight (2008) Philip Seymour Hoffman for Doubt (2008) Robert Downey Jr. for Tropic Thunder (2008)
Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
Danny Boyle for Slumdog Millionaire (2008) Stephen Daldry for The Reader (2008) David Fincher for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008) Ron Howard for Frost\Nixon (2008) Gus Van Sant for Milk (2008)
Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen
Frozen River (2008): Courtney Hunt Happy-Go-Lucky (2008): Mike Leigh In Bruges (2008): Martin McDonagh Milk (2008): Dustin Lance Black WALL·E (2008): Andrew Stanton, Pete Docter, Jim Reardon
Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Eric Roth, Robin Swicord Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Simon Beaufoy The Reader (2008): David Hare Frost/Nixon (2008): Peter Morgan Doubt (2008): John Patrick Shanley
Best Achievement in Cinematography
Changeling (2008): Tom Stern Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Anthony Dod Mantle The Reader (2008): Roger Deakins, Chris Menges The Dark Knight (2008): Wally Pfister The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Claudio Miranda
Best Achievement in Editing
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Angus Wall, Kirk Baxter Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Chris Dickens Milk (2008): Elliot Graham Frost/Nixon (2008): Daniel P. Hanley, Mike Hill The Dark Knight (2008): Lee Smith
Best Achievement in Art Direction
Changeling (2008): James J. Murakami, Gary Fettis Revolutionary Road (2008): Kristi Zea, Debra Schutt The Duchess (2008): Michael Carlin, Rebecca Alleway The Dark Knight (2008): Nathan Crowley, Peter Lando The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Donald Graham Burt, Victor J. Zolfo
Best Achievement in Costume Design
Australia (2008): Catherine Martin Revolutionary Road (2008): Albert Wolsky Milk (2008): Danny Glicker The Duchess (2008): Michael O’Connor The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Jacqueline West
Best Achievement in Makeup
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Greg Cannom Hellboy II: The Golden Army (2008): Mike Elizalde, Thomas Floutz The Dark Knight (2008): John Caglione Jr., Conor O’Sullivan
Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Alexandre Desplat Defiance (2008): James Newton Howard Milk (2008): Danny Elfman Slumdog Millionaire (2008): A.R. Rahman WALL·E (2008): Thomas Newman
Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Song
Slumdog Millionaire (2008): A.R. Rahman, Gulzar(“Jai Ho”) Slumdog Millionaire (2008): A.R. Rahman, Maya Arulpragasam(“O Saya”) WALL·E (2008): Peter Gabriel, Thomas Newman(“Down to Earth”)
Best Achievement in Sound
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): David Parker, Michael Semanick, Ren Klyce, Mark Weingarten The Dark Knight (2008): Ed Novick, Lora Hirschberg, Gary Rizzo Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Ian Tapp, Richard Pryke, Resul Pookutty WALL·E (2008): Tom Myers, Michael Semanick, Ben Burtt Wanted (2008): Chris Jenkins, Frank A. Montaño, Petr Forejt
Best Achievement in Sound Editing
The Dark Knight (2008): Richard King Iron Man (2008): Frank E. Eulner, Christopher Boyes Slumdog Millionaire (2008): Tom Sayers WALL·E (2008): Ben Burtt, Matthew Wood Wanted (2008): Wylie Stateman
Best Achievement in Visual Effects
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008): Eric Barba, Steve Preeg, Burt Dalton, Craig Barron The Dark Knight (2008): Nick Davis, Chris Corbould, Timothy Webber, Paul J. Franklin Iron Man (2008): John Nelson, Ben Snow, Daniel Sudick, Shane Mahan
Best Animated Feature Film of the Year
Bolt (2008): Chris Williams, Byron Howard Kung Fu Panda (2008): John Stevenson, Mark Osborne WALL·E (2008): Andrew Stanton
Best Foreign Language Film of the Year
Der Baader Meinhof Komplex (2008) (Germany) Entre les murs (2008) (France) Revanche (2008) (Austria) Okuribito (2008) (Japan) Vals Im Bashir (2008) (Israel)
Best Documentary, Features
The Betrayal – Nerakhoon (2008): Ellen Kuras, Thavisouk Phrasavath Encounters at the End of the World (2007): Werner Herzog, Henry Kaiser The Garden (2008): Scott Hamilton Kennedy Man on Wire (2008): James Marsh, Simon Chinn Trouble the Water (2008): Tia Lessin, Carl Deal
I would love to see Man on Wire win this one – it recounted the insane affirmation of Philippe Petit’s highest tightrope wire act ever. Much of it was scored to Petit’s favorite music by Michael Nyman. The 2005 animated short The Man Who Walked Between the Towers included with the DVD exposes Petit being much closer to the fiction of fairy tales as opposed to the man of flesh and blood still going about his own way. I hope that James Marsh and Simon Chinn will invite Mr. Petit on stage to say a few words.
Still, it would be exhilarating to see Werner Herzog on the podium addressing Hollywood about the voodoo of location and how aspiring filmmakers should walk 500 miles before making one.
Then again, a win for Trouble the Water would amplify the voices of Katrina survivors like Kimberley Roberts, a real hero.
November 11, 2008 |News, Trailers|By Christopher Beaubien
No! This not another merger-bastardization of the Ridley Scott/James Cameron enterprise. It’s a CGI feature from Dreamworks that comes in ATOMOVISION! – correction – INTRU3D! Sigh, 3D is so overrated.
It is directed by Dreamworks devotees Rob Letterman (Shark Tale, 2004) and Conrad “Gingerbread Man” Vernon (Shrek 2, 2004).
Watching this reminds me of a Brad Bird feature that was “Bold! Dramatic! Heroic!” Let’s just hope Monsters VS Aliens isn’t another hobo suit. Another denominator is that the score sounds like a low-rent Beetlejuice score.
However, any movie that features a United States President that looks and sounds like Stephen Colbert has my vote — “Hail To The Cheese!”
Others lending their voices are Seth Rogen (Zach and Miri Make A Porno, 2008) , Paul Rudd (The Shape of Things, 2003), Hugh Laurie (House M.D. was in Spice World, 1997) and Reese Witherspoon (Freeway, 1996) as Susan the Fifty-Five Foot Woman – insert Shrinking Lover quip from Pedro Almodóvar’s Talk To Her (2002) here.
I am a filmmaker, illustrator, designer and writer living in Vancouver, BC. I also manage Rainbeau Creative, a company that develops art and multimedia.
CINELATION is a forum where I speculate on aspects of filmmaking that intrigue me.