Les Anges du péché

I’ve just seen a ghost . . . …ditions Gallimard in France has recently released a stunningly-produced DVD of Robert Bresson’s debut feature, Les Anges du PÈchÈ (1943), complete with Anne Wiazemsky’s elaborate (but unsubtitled) 2004 documentary, Anges 1943, Les histoire d’un film. The film was digitally restored and played as part of the “Cannes Classics” revival series in 2005, and it’s so much better than extant unofficial video releases floating around, it’s like seeing it anew. I’ve added my review to the site I co-administrate, Robert-Bresson.com, here.

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Silence essay

The first half of my essay for the imminent Masters of Cinema Series DVD release, Masahiro Shinoda’s Silence (Chinmoku, 1971), can now be found here. I guess Eureka’s thinking is to offer those who purchase the release an added perk (beyond seeing the film itself, of course).

This was a fun essay to work on, drawing together various subjects–Japanese cinema, colonial history, postwar French Catholicsm, and Eastern versus Western thinking–that jostled together and formed interesting insights. I don’t know if every critic sees his or her own writing as part of a process of discovery (rather than …

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Los Angeles Film Festival, Entry 3

My final wrap-up of the Los Angeles Film Festival:


Daratt (Dry Season)

Continuing my exploration of the excellent New Crowned Hope series, I caught up with Mahamat Saleh Haroun’s entry from Chad, which won the Special Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival last year. The filmmaker builds off the themes of vengeance and forgiveness in Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito by setting his story during the period following the Chadian civil war, when universal amnesty was officially declared. Rejecting that policy, an elderly man whose son was murdered during the conflict asks his grandson to avenge his father, and …

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Los Angeles Film Festival, Entry 2

More from the Los Angeles Film Festival:


Copacabana

When Argentine filmmaker Martin Rejtman was asked by a television station to document a large community event, he settled on something he knew little about–a Bolivian music festival in Buenos Aires, and its surrounding immigrant culture. A filmmaker noted for his highly scripted fictional features, Rejtman approached the task with an entirely new conceit: look, listen, learn, record intuitively, and discover a form later.

The resulting film is a wide-eyed exploration of the Bolivian experience that seems like a traditional documentary turned inside out. Beginning with the Nuestra SeÒora de Copacabana festival, …

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Los Angeles Film Festival, Entry 1

The Los Angeles Film Festival is well underway, and this the second year the festival has been held in Westwood Village, an outdoor entertainment plaza featuring several movie palaces and a plethora of eateries between UCLA and the largely Persian neighborhood to the south. The location continues to work beautifully–far better than the scattered set-up of previous years. Sunny and breezy, with temperatures hovering between the upper 70s and lower 80s, it has been downright refreshing to stroll (or run, as the case may be) between venues.

The festival’s newest venue is Landmark’s “national flagship” theater at the Westside Pavilions …

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LAFF 2007

Robert Koehler and I are both planning to attend this year’s LAFF, and as of this afternoon, it looks like I’ve been granted press credentials for the festival, so I plan on writing about a decent share of films. (And rewatching a few favorites, such as Honor of the Knights, Times and Winds, Syndromes and a Century, and Paraguayan Hammock.) With everyone lamenting the death of newspapers–premature though it may be–it amazes me that serious bloggers continue to get shut out of many festivals. I know I’m not the only cinephile who considers the internet my

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