James Quandt.1 THE DEATH OF MR. LAZARESCU (CRISTI PUIU) Olfactory cinema--one can verily ver·i·ly adv. 1. In truth; in fact. 2. With confidence; assuredly. [Middle English verraily, from verrai, true; see very. smell the film's sodden protagonist--and a miracle of observational empathy. In our diminished culture, the title probably qualifies as a spoiler, but the inevitability of Mr. Lazarescu's demise does nothing to lessen the surprise of his squalid Dantean odyssey toward death. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] 2 THREE TIMES (HOU HSIAO-HSIEN) Conscious summa or inadvertent sampler of Hou's career, his triptych of love stories opens rapturously and ends attenuated Attenuated Alive but weakened; an attenuated microorganism can no longer produce disease. Mentioned in: Tuberculin Skin Test attenuated having undergone a process of attenuation. ; no one in contemporary cinema comes closer to Vermeer's interiors with his pellucid pellucid /pel·lu·cid/ (pel-oo´sid) translucent. pel·lu·cid adj. Admitting the passage of light; transparent or translucent. pellucid translucent. lighting and composed domestic space. 3 THE SUN (ALEXANDER SOKUROV) The Russian director's "Men of Power" trilogy concludes with a hushed, troubling portrait of Hirohito--a Gotterdammerung made literal by spectral lighting and fungal color. Issei is·sei n. pl. issei or is·seis A Japanese immigrant, especially one to the United States. [Japanese : ichi, one, first (from Middle Chinese Ogata's scarily endearing rendition of the emperor, his lips restively testing the air with carplike twitches, is beyond uncanny. 4 GARLANDS (T. J. WILCOX; METRO PICTURES) and 5 PALAST (TACITA DEAN; 51ST VENICE BIENNALE) In contrast to Matthew Barney's Drawing Restraint 9--a bloated voyage into japonisme, whale fat, and cockle-shell backpacks--these two works are touchingly modest, truly romantic in their rendering of the end of things. The imminent obsolescence ob·so·les·cent adj. 1. Being in the process of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming obsolete. 2. Biology Gradually disappearing; imperfectly or only slightly developed. of their small-gauge formats adds melancholic force to their respective portraits of futile acts, foreshortened lives, and imperiled sites. 6 INSTRUCTIONS FOR A LIGHT AND SOUND MACHINE (PETER TSCHERKASSKY) Eli Wallach seems condemned to run forever through a graveyard in Tscherkassky's nightmarishly looping, self-consuming attempt (in the filmmaker's words) to "turn a Roman western [The Good, The Bad and the Ugly] into a Greek tragedy." 7 MOMENTS CHOISIS (JEAN-LUC GODARD) Selecting favorite moments from his monumental Histoire(s) du cinema, Godard leaves out all the joy and juice--the soaring tribute to Italian Neorealism, especially--but what remains is morosely affecting. 8 LA TRAHISON (PHILIPPE FAUCON) A terse, ambiguous, immensely intelligent portrait of harkis during the Algerian war. 9 LAST DAYS (GUS VAN SANT) and 10 GRIZZLY MAN (WERNER HERZOG) Odd, if not peas-in-a-pod, twins: In each a blond, druggy drug·gy 1 Slang adj. drug·gi·er, drug·gi·est Of or relating to drugs or drug use: "boozy, druggy confessions" Vincent Canby. fuck-up first finds Eden and then finds death--man-child innocents destroyed by their own ingenuousness. The first is all mumble and meander, the second irritatingly voluble vol·u·ble adj. 1. Marked by a ready flow of speech; fluent. 2. a. Turning easily on an axis; rotating. b. Botany Twining or twisting: a voluble vine. , but the flashes of early Errol Morris Americana-grotesque in both films seal their strange confraternity con·fra·ter·ni·ty n. pl. con·fra·ter·ni·ties An association of persons united in a common purpose or profession. [Middle English confraternite . SENIOR PROGRAMMER AT THE CINEMATHEQUE ONTARIO IN TORONTO, JAMES QUANDT ORGANIZED THE CURRENT TRAVELING RETROSPECTIVE OF THE FILMS OF MIKIO NARUSE. |
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