Monday, February 28, 2005

Le Pays des sourds, 1992
[In the Land of the Deaf]
Nicholas Philibert



  • Can the deaf feel music ? How much does the sense of hearing define mental traits of rationality, logic and reason ? To what extent do the deaf attempt confirmity to the hearing world and to what extent do the hearing accommodate ?
  • A moving and convincing portrait of society's misapprehension (and misconception) of the (often isolated, sometimes forcibly so) world of the deaf community.
  • Philibert provides a compelling comparison between Jean-Claude Poulain, a brilliantly articulate (and addictively entertaining) deaf professor whose expression via French sign language is compared to a formalist 'oralism' teacher who develops speaking skills in children through repetitive exercises. ( A child playing the 'pacman' video game via modulated voice response is a memorable scene)
  • The irony between painstaking attempts of the deaf to adapt to the hearing world, and the hearing world's facile efforts (and sometimes, facile tears) - readily manifested and often lacking sincerity or depth - is provocatively brought out.
  • In the Q&A session, Philibert indicated that apart from making an effort to understand the world of deaf by being with them, filming for 9 months, he was drawn to the similarities between sign language and film. A scene well-articulated in sign language could well be an effective set of picture boards. A screenplay in sign language.

Sunday, February 27, 2005

Film Watch

A Fei jing juen, 1991
[Days of Being Wild]
Wong Kar-Wai



  • Spare compared to some of his later work like Chungking Express and In the Mood for Love in terms of colour, music and camera angles.
  • Characters trying to transcend the mundane sorrow of their lives via their quest for acceptance.
  • Utlimately unconvincing, almost catalectic. Perhaps blinded by love for the thematic strength of it's screenplay ?
  • Nothing in Yuddy's character inspires chemistry (love, anger, hope, hatred, etc.) between him and the characters he interacts with (Yuddy & Su Lizhen, Yuddy & his adoptive mother, Yuddy & Tide).
  • Attempt to create a melancholic atmosphere to depict characters' sense of incompletion with low lighting, rain and lack of colour contrast. But there is no intensity in the depicted melancholy, perhaps due to the colours used. Compare this to melancholy and longing beautifully realized in Kieslowski's La Double Vie de Veronique (sepia overlay) and Trois Couleurs: Bleu (blue imagery).
  • Technique:
    • Repeated scene of the slow moving, blue filtered landscape of the (Filipino ?) countryside.
    • Interestingly, Tony Leung mysteriously appears in the last scene.

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Mar adentro, 2004
[The Sea Inside]
Alejandro Amenábar




  • Convincing premise and visuals, but a contrived resolution.
  • Technique:
    • Lyrical, fluid sequences depict Ramon's dreams. Extended, mobile aerial shot of the lush-green mountanious terrain, climaxing with a deliberate arrival at the sea shore.
The Bed You Sleep In, 1993
John Jost

  • The contradictions between the striking, natural beauty of the almost desolate Oregon countryside with the desolate, depleted lives of it's inhabitants, interspersed with prolonged, disaffecting scenes in a lumber mill, creates an immense and persistent atmosphere of foreboding ill.
  • Quotes Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Every violation of the truth is not only a sort of suicide in the liar, but is a stab at the health of human society". Parallelizes the transgression between father and daughter with the transgression between human society and the environment. A telling portrait of inherent contradictions in US society.
  • Technique:
    • Coloured (occasionally dis-coloured) still shot of Ray driving his car juxtaposed with high-contrast (over-exposed or bleached), almost black and white, mobile up-angle sequence of receeding trees and the sky (shot from a moving car) - such that edges of Ray's pale white face merge with the bleached sky.
    • Conversation frame with two characters: tilted angle shot with one character in the mirror along with down-tilted-angle shot of the other character.
    • Conversation frame with two characters: extreme closeup shot with one character to the left and the other behind to the right, at a distance. Focus shifts between characters midway the conversation.
Hwa yang nian hua, 2000
[In the Mood for Love]
Wong Kar-Wai




  • Use of slow motion scenes juxtaposed with waltz music (by Michael Galasso) in the background.
  • Intensely compelling portrait of claustrophobia, both external (crowded apartments and nosy neighbours) and internal (dread of failure of their illusory hope of the inviolability and invincibilty of thier marital relationships), using vivid contrast of bright colours. On the other hand, complete isolation of Chow Mo-wan and Su Li-zhen during their direct encounters -- no other character is present when they meet, even in restaurants, signifies both their isolation from society and their shared attribute of loneliness.
  • Reflection of the growing insignificance of the spouses in their prevaling lives using only the former's voices.
  • Technique:
    • Shot in episodic, fade-out, fade-in fragments which aids the (occasional) elliptical narration.
    • Stylized camerawork:
      • 2-way dialogues in Chow Mo-wan's office shot in uncommon angles (sideways and overhead)

    Tuesday, February 22, 2005

    Cinemarati critic Gabriel Shanks interviews critic Acquarello:

    ... I’m ...[making an]... argument ...[for]... how and why the film works, at least on a personal level. At the same time, I’m also trying to catalogue the films that I do find meaningful because it helps me remember the experience of them. So for me, the most efficient way to accomplish that is by dissecting the film and assembling the facts and detail observations in a kind of more clinical, scientific method application that removes the author’s personality from the equation. I think the approach also helps the readers to decide if it’s a film that will be meaningful for them as well, without insinuating your own personal filters too much into the reading. It’s certainly not a format that suits everyone, but neither is the subject matter.

    ...And I know it's cliché, but I'm still drawn to films about longing, and quite a few contemporary Asian filmmakers have turned this theme into an art form, most notably Tsai Ming-liang from Taiwan, Park Ki-yong from Korea, and Wong Kar-wai from Hong Kong.

    Saturday, February 19, 2005

    Hai shang hua, 1998
    [The Flowers of Shanghai]
    Hou Hsiao-hsien



    • Technique:
      • Entirely filmed in the interior with low lighting:
        • Subdued lighting on characters surrounded by opulence (costumes, architecture, etc.) depicts the dichotomy between their illusory life as entertainers (or their patrons) and the artificiality and fallacy behind their act. In a stunning form of visual dichotomy, one that uses the camera as a key dramatic element, the lighting functions as a transluscent veil that helps 'illuminate' the flower girls' internality (to the audience).
      • Typical for Hou, filmed in extended takes that limits human actions and interactions to the business of day-to-day living.

    Saturday, February 12, 2005

    La Mala Educación, 2004
    [Bad Education]
    Pedro Almodóvar



    Quintessentially Almodóvar :
    • Almodóvar has reached a level of visual refinement where he can be both bold and elegant (with carefully cultivated subtlety) at the same time.
    • Life continues in his films in it's primal innocence - the bold, primal colours, the bold, primal characters and their bold, primal sense of humour.
    • Overall construction is so sensual that it appeals to the senses like the lush sounds of some orchestra (as opposed to fertile/thriving/characterized by abundance/prosperous/plentiful)
    • Full of ironical and whimsical double entendres.
    • Surreal humor (having the intense irrational reality of a dream)
    • Pulp narrative, usually complex like unusual interconnection between characters, films within a film etc. Very definition of 'pulp' in the truest sense of the word: lurid (shocking/melodramatic/sensational/causing revulsion) - subject matter with often shocking subjects portrayed as non-shocking.
    • One is, still, not repulsed by the characters commiting lurid crimes. One doesn't see them as victims either, but accepts them as they are.

    Friday, February 11, 2005

    Le Charme Discret de la Bourgeoisie, 1972
    [The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie]
    Luis Buñuel
    • Compelling portrait of the hyprocrisy of the rich.
    • Technique:
      • Repeated scene of the guests walking on a deserted road in the desolate countryside depicts the quotidian drabness of their, almost regimented yet aimless, lives that is isolated from reality of the common masses.
    Film Watch

    Chong qing sen lin, 1994
    [Chungking Express]
    Wong Kar-Wai



    • Chase sequences depicted using stroboscopic motion.
    • Wong Kar-Wai's fascination with time, a charateristic he shares with Hou Hsiao-Hsein, creates an interest in duration as an essential element of film. Juxtaposition of accelerated surrounding 'life' with slow motion sequences of characters reflects their (contemplative) emotional state. Wong frequently uses music or dispassionate voice-over narration by characters (instead or along with time) to the same effect.

    Sunday, February 06, 2005

    Film watch

    Vivre sa vie, 1962
    [My Life to Live]
    Jean-Luc Godard
    • Technique:
      • Stylized camera angles:
        • The credits show Anna Karina's face and profile.
        • Conversation between Nana and Paul shot at an angle showing their backs with the characters seated at the same table at a distance reflecting the distance in their relationship.
        • Silent film intertitles are sometimes used for Nana, much like the film she is moved by - Carl Theodor Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of Arc.
        • Characters use windows overlooking streets/buildings as backdrop in many interior scenes. (Note particularly the 'interior-exterior' dialogue between Nana and Paul in front of the video overlooking the street in a video game parlour)
        • Amazingly fluid camera movement as the bouyantly happy Nana dances around the snooker table. As critic Arquello points out "Godard's revolutionary camerawork serves as a cinematic extension of Nana's soul."

    Saturday, February 05, 2005

    Stanford based Grade The News gave abysmal scores to bay area newssources, especially TV ones

    Their grading criteria has 7 yardsticks that seem sensible:

    1. NEWSWORTHINESS is based on two factors: 1) whether the story topicis "core" or "peripheral," and 2) whether the story is likely to havea direct and lasting (six months or more) informational impact on awide audience (at least 10,000 people).

    2. CONTEXT measures the number of sources, and independent expertsources, in the day's top stories. An average of four regular sourcesor two experts merits an A.

    3. EXPLANATION means big-picture reporting (about issues and thematictreatment of events) as opposed to episodic reporting (micro-view newsof isolated events that focus only on the event itself).

    and others ...

    It's cheaper and easier to fill a newspaper or newscast with reportsof seemingly random violence, fires, parades, reunions or evenfisticuffs between politicians than to treat a problem as an issue.All the sources necessary to harvest such a story are at the scene. Areporter can complete the story in several hours. And the drama or spectacle will draw readers or viewers across the region.

    But such reporting leaves us mostly afraid, sad or perhaps feelinglucky to have avoided harm -- not informed of causes, effects andpossible solutions. Reporting violence episodically cultivates a sensethat nothing can be done.