Northwest Film & Video Festival
FILMMAKER
The Magazine of Independent Film

FILMMAKER BLOG Blog RSS Feed

Tuesday, April 08, 2008
CATCH-UP BLOGGING 


We just put the new Spring issue of Filmmaker to bed, so that's why there hasn't been much blogging here. Really, I was going to try to burn the midnight oil and throw some postings up, but then I read the now infamous New York Times "Death by Blogging" article and thought better of it.

So, here are a few things I would have posted about in greater detail if I had the time.

First, as you know from reading this blog, we try to keep up with and promote the work of our annual "25 New Faces" filmmakers. I don't know if it was because I was too focused on the issue, but I completely missed that 2006 New Face Carter Smith has his first feature in the theaters: the Universal horror film The Ruins. Completely missed it. Now, the film got slagged by a lot of reviewers, but I can't believe there's not something good about it. Darius Khondji shot it, and Harry Knowles posted an appreciative review. And having really liked the John Wyndham novel The Day of the Triffids when I was a kid, I know that it is possible for plants to be scary. So, at the least, this will be on my Netflix cue.

A good NYC indie producer, Karin Chien, is the guest this week on Lance Weiler's This Call is Being Recorded podcast.

The Swiss publisher Nieves will be releasing a paperback edition of the script for Harmony Korine's Mister Lonely (which you will read about in the next issue of Filmmaker). (Via Coolhunting.)

For screenwriters looking for real-world horror ideas, Kottke posted a link to this quite brilliant list, "Fear Hierarchy: Fears ranked from childhood through parenthood."

The FilmInFocus site is opening up its webpages to outside bloggers. Just added are Docurama's Liz Ogilvie, who has been posting reports from Full Frame, and U.K. producer Keith Griffiths of the company Illuminations. Griffiths' first post is entitled "Lost London and the Fight Against 'Dentists,'" and here is a brief excerpt from a longer post on gentrified London which Griffiths has penned from the small town of Deal, which he refers to earlier in the post as "Sin City":

Before exiling myself to Sin City on-sea, I had my office in this corrupt seedy Soho for many years and have regretted the inevitable swift gentrification of this area, as well as the once bombed and semi-derelict riverside warehouses. The lost magic and menacing riverside East End is well represented in the highly underrated 1962 Basil Dearden film All Night Long, a "hip" reworking of Shakespeare's Othello. Here the cool, cult actor Patrick McGoohan (pictured above left) stars as jazz drummer Johnny Cousin (Iago), gathering at a private gig in a riverside warehouse owned by a rich patron, Richard Attenborough. The film features rare appearances of jazz legends Dave Brubeck, Johnny Dankworth and Charlie Mingus performing together and tantalising the demi-monde with a memorable score. This warehouse location, where the clink of glasses and a steamy undercurrent of jealous passions bubble, has probably been "refurbished" and is now the home of a somewhat anxious City trader.

Such gentrification is of course not just the privilege of Londoners and I remember filming an interview in 1987 with Ken Jacobs for a documentary we were making called New York Framed, where he spoke eloquently in defense of the hidden corners, and museums of decay in New York City, regretting the results of "when all the dentists move in and make things nice and make things new". (Incidentally I presented this film at The Donnell Media Center/NY Public Library in 1988 or '89, when a young and hungry producer called James Schamus was in the audience and grabbed my coat afterwards for a "chat".) Indeed all "dentists" are a major danger to our film cultures, as they seek to clean our stained teeth and fill in all the interesting cavities. In fact, I think that Putin's Dentists are alive and well working for the state body responsible for the film industry here, known as the UK Film Council. As an institution, they seem pathologically obsessed into transforming the veritable London Film Festival, with its programme stuffed with small secret corners of unfashionable and minority treasures, into a more gentrified "red carpet" affair. This red carpet threatens to not only suffocate the lost Soho of London and Night and the City but also bury along with it any "uncomfortable pleasures" that might dare to breed in the cracks of the pavements.


# posted by Scott Macaulay @ 4/08/2008 05:40:00 PM
Comments (0)


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?



FALL 2008

RECENT POSTS

FERRIS SAVES THE Q & A
POLITICALLY INCORRECT
A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE?
PAUL ARTHUR, R.I.P.
WEEKEND ROUNDUP
ARTS ENGINE NABS DOCUCLUB
TIE ONE ON: GEN ART LAUNCHES IN NYC
AUSTIN FLASHBACKS
WOULD A FILM IMPROVE YOUR LIFE?
LOST AND CENTRAL CONFLICT THEORY


ARCHIVES

Current Posts
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
January 2005
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008

back to top
home page | archives | blog | resources | fest circuit | back issues | buy print subscription | buy digital subscription | digital sample | subscription FAQ | advertise | contact

© 2008 Filmmaker Magazine