Film and Video

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by Paul Schmelzer at 5:54 am 2005-09-13
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An extra on the set of Werner Herzog’s upcoming film Rescue Dawn, a Vietnam-era film being shot in Thailand, blogs his experiences:

Herzog didn’t stop there, though. During the shots that we were in, he was in our midst, barking directions (in a nice way) and even shoving the crowd from behind (CAN YOU IMAGINE? I can tell my grandchildren I was SHOVED BY THE GREAT HERZOG! ).

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by Paul Schmelzer at 10:28 am 2005-09-12
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Ang Lee

The top prize at the 62nd Venice Film Festival went to a film screening at the Walker on December 11. Brokeback Mountain, the latest from filmmaking partners Ang Lee and James Schamus won the Golden Lion for Best Film. To be screened as part of Lee’s Regis Dialogue and Retrospective (Nov. 11–Dec. 13), the film is a gay cowboy drama written by Annie Proulx, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Shipping News.

Also taking top awards was George Clooney’s second directorial effort, Good Night. And, Good Luck, which screens here October 7. David Strathairn, who will introduce the Walker screening, won the Coppa Volpi for Best Actor for his role as Edward R. Murrow in the film. The Osella for Best Screenplay went to George Clooney and Grant Heslov.

 
by Paul Schmelzer at 8:43 pm 2005-09-06
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A New York Times preview of Paradise Now, which screens at the Walker on October 2, just after its New York Film Festival appearance, reveals that director Hany Abu-Assad’s fictional tale of two suicide bombers was shot in “the real place and time”–the West Bank city of Nablus in summer 2004. “I think it was a very nave concept,” he said, “because, in the end, we were in a lot of danger and it could have been a disaster.”

Abu-Assad, who is Palestinian, says the Israeli censors approved the film for release, even though it shows suicide bombers not as crazed automatons but as frustrated people with conviction. “The daily humiliation is so big that people just agree to it,” he said. “The biggest motivation is the feeling of impotence. You are captured in your own city; you can’t do anything about it; you are nothing.” That position–as well as the broad hot-button topic of his film–is sure to stir up controversy wherever it screens.

Read the preview here.

Visit the Walker News Center to see how you can get notified about upcoming screening dates and times (includes RSS, calendar feeds, and more.)

Earlier: Terrific performance: on the narrative of suicide bombing.

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by Paul Schmelzer at 4:18 pm 2005-09-01
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Edward R. Murrow

When Edward R. Murrow spoke into the camera the evening of May 9, 1954, he was really speaking to Joseph McCarthy, the Wisconsin senator who zealously sought to root out suspected Communists in Hollywood, government, and across the country:

We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason if we dig deep in our history and doctrine and remember that we are not descended from fearful men, not from men who feared to write, to speak, to associate and to defend causes which were for the moment unpopular. We can deny our heritage and our history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the result. There is no way for a citizen of the Republic to abdicate his responsibility.

Whoa. Trade suspects–commies for terrorists–and his words seem apropos in our age of color-coded threat levels, feds snooping through library records, and indefinite detention of Muslim men. Screening today at the 62nd Venice Film Festival, a new film by George Clooney tackles this history, not through the broad lens of American culture but through the specific case of CBS, where a wicked battle preceded Murrow’s on-air spanking of McCarthy, one that exposed how fear gets internalized, even in an objective news operation. Clooney, who directed, co-wrote, and co-starred in this second directorial effort, Good Night. And, Good Luck., insisted at a press conference today that the film wasn’t a critique of current policies. “My goal is not to attack any administration, my goal is to raise a debate,” he said. “I didn’t make the film as a political statement, I made the film as a historical reference.” What the debate is about may be political, but more likely it’s about the media, a topic completely germane to times when media companies are sponsoring patriotic rallies, banning playlists that mention peace, and requiring its TV anchors to read pro-Bush statements on the air.

David Strathairn as Edward R. Murrow

Despite this timeliness, Clooney stays true to the story and the era, so much so that he shot the film in black-and white, editing in documentary footage of McCarthy and testimony from the trial of suspected Communist Milo Radulovich. This kind of attention seems to spring from Clooney’s admiration for Murrow. He says:

All my life, I have been fascinated with what are probably the great three moments in American journalism: Murrow taking on McCarthy; Walter Cronkite stepping from behind his desk (something he had never done before), pointing to the map of Vietnam and saying, ‘This is a mistake’; Woodward and Bernstein exposing Watergate…. Murrow is what we don’t have now. That one voice that everyone listens to. We knew that he wasn’t a communist, as McCarthy accused him of being. He’d been reporting from the Blitz, telling us the explosions looked like puffs of white rice on black velvet; we trusted him.

Which shoots me right back, yet again, to the present: thanks to Rathergate, Armstrong Williams, that Plame-outing Robert Novak, and partisan shouters Rush Limbaugh and Bill O’Reilly, media voices we can trust are, woefully, few and far between.

Good Night. And, Good Luck (which takes its title from Murrow’s signature sign-off) will make its area premiere as part of the Walker’s First Look series on October 7, with an introduction by the film’s lead, actor David Strathairn. See the trailer here.

 

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