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  • Virgin Media Shorts/Awards!

    Virgin Media Shorts/Awards!

    This is amazing!

    To celebrate Virgin Media’s ground-breaking VM Shorts Awards, PeerIndex will be giving people who are influential in cinema two tickets to see a film of their choice at one of the 38 gorgeous PictureHouse cinemas across the UK.

    Winners will also get a chance to attend the prestigious Virgin Media Shorts Awards ceremony in London on November 8th, 2012 and rub shoulders with VIPs and film winners.

    They will get to do this by watching the shortlisted movies on the virgin site and tweeting a film review with the hashtag #VMShortsReview.

    The best reviewers will be selected by film critic James King (presenter of ITV at the Movies), to stroll down the Red Carpet at the prestigious Virgin Media Shorts Awards ceremony in London on November 8th, 2012.

    Here is a link to the perk page where you can claim your tickets – http://www.peerindex.com/perk/vmshorts

  • Accounts From The Video Store Front Lines (No. 2)

    Accounts From The Video Store Front Lines (No. 2)

    “I remembered throwing punches around

    And preachin’ from my chair”

    Accounts from the Video Store Frontlines (no. 2)

    by Pablo D’Stair

    Any video clerk worthy of the title learned the ins-and-outs of navigating the often precarious harrows of customer recommendations, fairly quickly.  Those who embraced the position and did not merely decide to tow the line by halfheartedly pointing to the pre-selected Recommendations on the New Release wall or to relate stories of how perhaps-only-make-believe relatives/acquaintances had “really liked” whatever movie a customer might hold up to ask for encouragement in renting had to face the hard reality of what it meant to actually be endowed with a sense of personal aesthetic, let alone a faith that such a thing could mean something to anyone else, was something that might be in even the most meager way transmittable.

    Such clerks knew that insisting a customer leave with Bottle Rocket meant either a new best friend had just been made or that eye contact would be forever avoided with some specific human being, by mutual tacit consent; giving someone Sid and Nancy, Naked, Fitzcaraldo or Cache meant either the store would literally no longer be receiving a certain individual’s business or else from that time forward this customer would insist on calling ahead to ask the recommending-clerk to pick something and have it waiting, didn’t matter what.

    There was a lot at stake for the clerk who was in it for the long haul, who would be confined to the store and to contact with the same few dozen persons on a daily or at least bi-weekly basis. And never was the pressure more than when a well vetted, multiple-success customer (one who had shown discernment, good breeding, and openness to Art) happened to come in when the film JCVD was in stock, waiting right there on the shelf, the customer giving big wide smile and head nod from down the length of an aisle, eyes hungry while mouth said “There you are, give me something good, for tonight.”

    ***

    I understood, of course, any initial skepticism to the film. When I had first encountered JCVD I was prepared to enjoy it, but had it in mind—in part due to packaging and preview—that it would be a kind of self-deprecating, tongue-in-cheek romp, a bit of Meta-cinema lite, maybe a tepid and watchable cross between The Last Action Hero and Being John Malkovich (such a crossbreed I honestly would still be very interested in seeing, let me add). That is to say, I was not prepared for it as it actually is, not prepared for a new addition to my without-a-moment’s-hesitation recommendation pile, had not expected a new entry to my list of “films that are so much my favorite there is no point in calling them favorites”—had not anticipated that the motion picture would reveal itself to be, simply put, sublime.

    And there is no way to get this across to someone, no way at all before they have seen it, no way to make them understand that they are wrong about everything they are, being fair, kind of right to be thinking by way of hesitation—much in the same way that recommending someone the termite/driver ant documentary Besieged Fortress on the strength that it would “change their views of their own humanity” could not be understood as anything but a cipher or a tipsy rambling before that film is taken in.

    And while I would like to have had confidence that a customer who had loved You Can Count On Me, We Don’t Live Here Anymore and Man on the Train would, without fail, devour the beauty of JCVD and track me down at home, sneak into my house at night and cuddle up beside me for having made them acquainted with the film, what I knew more was that, through some vicious trick of mother nature, those customers were actually the sort of people who would most venomously discard the film into the ashcan on principle unviewed or be hardwired to praise it only as the anomaly it might, surface level, appear to be on a biased watch. Yes, sadly there is just something in the borderline prickishness it takes to be an astute lover of Cinema that would kick in at a Darwinian level. It was, after all, a ‘Van Damme movie’ and without asserting that they are “sort-of-kidding, of course” even the hepest of film buff or the hippest or hipster cinephile could not be expected to breathe “Art” and “that guy” in the same sentence.

    ***

    But Art is what it is, unquestionably, unabashedly—art of the highest echelon of cinema, jolting, beautiful and vibrantly alive with brazen and cathartic honesty. And it being so, I and clerks like me were put in the firing line, no choice but to hold it up in the light it deserved as often as possible, to laud it and do our best to keep it from being something with no higher hope than in twenty-years time popping up on a list here or there as an ‘overlooked gem.’

    Usually, I’d begin talking the film up in a general way (leaving out key details like who the star was) as I casually strolled a customer in the direction of where it would be found, then as I neared the spot itself, reached for the box, I’d explain that they were to brace themselves for a bit of a jolt at what I was about to hand them, making it flat that I was assuring them I was not dicking them about by earnestly describing it as “pretty much a blend between Dog Day Afternoon and oh take your pick between  A Bout De Souffle, Tirez sur le Pianiste or Bande a part.” The customer would, I could tell, be coiling tight with giddy anticipation, visions of…well, anything but Jean Claude Van Damme in a breathtaking and understated performance delineating the line between Realization and Idealization, between Self-loathing and Self-actualization dancing in their mind.

    This would fall out in one of two ways: either they would notice the cover of the film before I had finished the introduction, laugh big like I’d been winding them up the whole time and quickly say “But really which movie?” or they would just take the box, silently look at it (Van Damme staring at them disaffectedly), turn it over (unfortunately greeted with Van Damme flexing his arm as though to say “look how strong and awesome I am” while the image is actually pulled from a portion of the film where he is saying anything, anything, anything but that) turn it back over and look at me while saying they didn’t like “that kind of movie.”

    “You’ve never seen this kind of movie,” I’d say (in either of these circumstances) and I would, like a doctor recommending leeches or something, say how I understood the hesitation, but unlike a doctor recommending leeches I would be able to honestly assert to them it would be something they would thank me for, profusely.

    If the discussion went any further, it would only be for the customer to more politely turn down the suggestion, saying they “like smart action flicks, I guess,” but were “in the mood for something else” or some close cousin of that statement.

    ***

    Sometimes I’d just address the elephant in the room before the trunk had appeared by beginning my recommendation on the merits of Van Damme’s performance, straight out (expressions like “captivating,” “mesmerizing,” “utterly perfect” often coming up when I did) and explaining that after watching this film the one thing I could say with sincerity was that Van Damme should have been working with Bresson or at least with Lumet (I always tried to invoke Dog Day Afternoon, as much as possible, JCVD so very much an out-and-out homage to that masterpiece) and that it is lamentable that this is the first time in his film history, as I was familiar with it, that Jean Claude was allowed to do anything substantive—often only saying “substantive” so I could more properly up-sell it to “artistic” or even “imperative.”

    “It’s a bank heist film?” I’d sometimes be asked (and fairly enough) to which I’d have to say “No no, well, there’s kind of heist in it, of sorts, but that’s not what it’s…about…at all.”

    And meanwhile the customer would slowly be putting it back and picking up Juno or Julie and Julia or something while I got a bit disappointed that they probably considered Dog Day Afternoon a “bank heist movie” and, following this logic, probably didn’t even know who Bresson was and that, sadly, they’d never know who Jean Claude Van Damme is, which is something, really, they ought to.

    ***

    Pablo D’Stair is a novelist, essayist, and interviewer.  Co-founder of the art house press KUBOA, he is also a regular contributor to the Montage: Cultural Paradigm (Sri Lanka). His book Four Self-Interviews About Cinema: the short films of director Norman Reedus will be re-releasing October, 2012 through Serenity House Publishing, International.

  • Live East Die Young

    Live East Die Young

    Finnish Director Laura Hyppönen’s gritty East London debut film Live East Die Young has received a nomination for best UK feature film at this year’s Raindance Film Festival in London.

    The film will hold its world premiere at the festival on the 4th October, shortly followed by French premiere at the Dinard British Film Festival where the film has been nominated for the festival’s Grand Jury prize, the Golden Hitchcock.

    Shot on a shoestring budget and featuring a distinctive soundtrack from the indie underground wave (featuring cult bands Bo Ningen, Feral AKA MC Kinky and many others), Live East Die Young is a raw look at the lives of model Emma and her best friend, hairdresser Max, as they descend ever-deeper into a destructive world of parties, lies, sex and drugs. Shot entirely at authentic East London locations, from artist warehouses to club basements, the film offers a voyeuristic, dogma-esque look into their substance-fuelled lifestyle. The film also stars newcomers Zoë Grisedale and James ‘Jeanette’ Main, best known for his involvement with notorious real-life East London party collective, Boombox.

    LIVE EAST DIE YOUNG TRAILER from Live East Die Young on Vimeo.

    Hyppönen, who has been living in the UK for 11 years, produced, wrote and directed the film. She says: “It’s great that an edgy independent no-budget film like Live East Die Young has been recognised among recent UK successes like ‘Ill Manors’ and ‘Shadow Dancer’. The project has been a labour of love, made without any support from film funds. We are really excited to see how the audience will respond!”

    The film is sold internationally by Paris-based Reel Suspects. Matteo Lovadina, CEO, who handpicked the project from Cannes during the Marche du Film, says: “I am pleased to work as the international sales agent for Live East Die Young. The film’s roughness and documentary look made me feel immediately inside the story. It’s a crossover film that can fit equally well into niches and attract the general public. The Raindance world premiere and Dinard competition selection are a confirmation of the film’s potential.”

  • Fritz Lang’s Die Nibelungen

    Fritz Lang’s Die Nibelungen

    Perhaps the most stately of Fritz Lang’s two-part epics, the five-hour Die Nibelungen is a courageous and hallucinatory work. Its extraordinary set-pieces, archetypal themes, and unrestrained ambition have proved an inspiration for nearly every fantasy cycle that has emerged on-screen since – from Star Wars to The Lord of the Rings.

    In Part One, Siegfried, the film’s eponymous hero acquires the power of invincibility after slaying a dragon and bathing in the creature’s blood. Later, an alliance through marriage between the hero and the royal clan of the Nibelungen turns treacherous, with Siegfried’s sole weakness exploited.

    In Part Two, Kriemhilds Rache [Kriemhild’s Revenge], Siegfried’s widow travels to the remote land of the Huns to wed the monstrous Attila, and thereby enlist his forces in an act of vengeance that culminates in massacre, conflagration, and, under the auspices of Lang, one of the most exhilarating and terrifying end-sequences in all of cinema.

    Adapted from the myth that was also the basis for Wagner’s Ring cycle of operas, Lang’s epic offers its own startling expressionistic power – a summit of the director’s artistry. The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present Die Nibelungen in a spectacular new HD restoration, released as a 2 x DVD set & a 2 x Blu-ray set in the UK on 29 October 2012.

    A short clip from Die Nibelungen Part 1: Siegfried, depicting Siegfried’s fight with the dragon is below.

  • A Night In The Woods – DVD Review

    A Night In The Woods – DVD Review

    November 2010. Three people disappeared on Dartmoor. What you are about to see is found footage. That’s the gist of the opening titles so yes we’re watching a “found footage” film about people in a the woods. You could be forgiven for thinking “Blair Witch was thirteen years ago do directors really think it a good idea to keep scraping that barrel”. In this case director Richard Parry (director of South West 9 and the interesting Dale Farm: The Big Eviction).

    Couple Brody and Kerry are taking a weekend trip to the moors of Dartmoor. On the way there they pick up Kerry’s cousin Leo. Tension builds between Brody and Leo as they attempt to assert their superiority. As night falls the group disintegrates and the darkness brings untold horrors on the group.

    Reading the synopsis before watching A Night in the Woods I hoped that it may have been a pastiche of the recent slurry of found footage horror films. It’s not a bad genre and when done just write can be some of the creepiest cinema out there today. The flip side is that all you need is a cheap camera, some actor friends with a free weekend and a location, say a field, that you don’t have to pay for. Then anyone can make anything. Cliches are already easy to spot, especially in films involving unseen ghouls, the fact that this is so derivative of The Blair Witch Project it couldn’t be anything but a parody.

    Unfortunately it’s not. Starting off in a domestic setting reminiscent of Kill List we find Brody (Scott McNairy) and Kerry (Anna Skellern) very much in love. For a reason that is never fully explained Brody feels the need to record every little thing. This may lead you to think “why would you record this?” several times. Shots range from looking overly stylised and set up to being so off-kilter it’s hard to see anything. Often with found footage films though you have to put these worries aside. Things aren’t so rosy with the arrival of Leo (Andrew Hawley). Despite being Kerry’s cousin Brody takes an instant dislike for their new companion. Is he really her cousin or is there something more to Kerry and Leo’s relationship? This plot thread is swept aside for a moment as the trio visit a local pub where for no real reason every one in the pub talk about devils being up on the moors. The film suddenly turns into a talking head documentary as colourful types talk about occult happenings. At one point in what has to be the comedy highlight of the year a native actually says the line “you don’t believe me? You come in here in your shiny car, with your green wellies. What do you know?” I couldn’t believe that line has actually been included in a “serious” horror in 2012.

    Apparently there was no script and the actors improvised through scene set ups much in the same way that Curb Your Enthusiasm is made. Once the threesome are out on the moor there are plenty of scenes of them fooling around with the camera which looks terribly arty. Everyone also uses time to treat the camera as a confessional booth telling it and us their little secrets. It’s a lazy well of feeding the audience information. Brody on several occasions decides to sit down with the camera and provide an almost Shakespearean monologue. All three leads are very good and in their respect roles they all manage to convince. McNairy and Hawley play the dual personas of the nice guy/arsehole well and Skellern does angry and terrified convincingly. But with the dialogue left largely to them scenes become stuttering matches. The characters repeating questions at each other which may seem naturalistic but on film comes off as annoying. The horror aspect of the film – which comes in the form of shaky tents, odd noises and nooses hanging from trees – feels like an afterthought. Whilst it is a nice touch that it is never explained whether the terrors facing the group are supernatural or mind games perpetrated by Leo or Brody it still feels like an odd tangent for what has essentially been a drama till this point. There are a few effective shock scares as Kerry runs screaming through the woods after the homicidal looking Leo and Brody have run of themselves. Overall the horror is practically non-existent, good night sleeps are guaranteed.

    The whole time watching A Night in the Woods I could not get one question out of my mind. Why is Leo there at all? As we discover; he is Kerry’s ex who she seems to be having some kind of affair with. Brody suspects this. Why in her right mind would Kerry decide to go out into the middle of the moors with her boyfriend and her affair. What possible reason could she have to do that? Even lying that Leo is her “cousin”, she really couldn’t be away from him for a few days. It is one almighty plot hole which I just could not get my head around. It’s as if the three characters made up this character arc whilst out filming in the moors with out much thought as to whether it made sense plot wise.

    Despite the spirited performances by the three leads the script is far too weak dramatically or horrifically to make a compelling watch. Even at 76minutes A Night in the Woods feels long. Adding nothing to the genre of found footage horror it’s one that will pass with out much notice. Had it gone the route of parody it may have been far more successful. The making-of accompanying the DVD release is a far more interesting watch than the film itself.

    Can we please stay out of the woods now?