Tampilkan postingan dengan label MIDNIGHT. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label MIDNIGHT. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 26 November 2013

‘Before Midnight’ and the Cinema’s Greatest Trysts

lost in translation

“Well you know what it’s like when you first sleep with someone you don’t know. It’s…you like become this blank canvas, and it gives you an opportunity to project onto that canvas who you want to. And that’s what’s interesting because everybody does it.” – “Weekend”

“Before Midnight” opens today, and we at Film.com are all very excited about it. We’re excited about it because we’re fans of Richard Linklater, and so Vadim Rizov ranked all of his films. We’re excited about it because we love Ethan Hawke, for whom Jenni Miller took a look at his career resurgence. We’re excited about it because we love “Before Sunrise” and “Before Sunset,” which made this week’s Great Debate between Calum Marsh and Forrest Cardamenis all the more interesting a conflict. I’d like to add one more reason. I’m excited for “Before Midnight” because I adore its micro-genre.

I actually hadn’t seen either “Before Sunrise” or “Before Sunset” until about a month ago, while preparing for the New York premiere of “Before Midnight” at the Tribeca Film Festival. Yet I’ve loved films like it for years. Granted, there aren’t enough of them for it to be a real genre and at this point I think we’ve moved beyond that kind of categorization anyway. We still have “movements,” sure, but we get much more excited about genre-blending these days than their forming.

If I had to put a word to it, though, I might call them “tryst” films. These are movies about two people who meet and fall into romance, or lust, or even love at first sight. Yet whatever they have is fleeting, given a quick expiration date by a flight back to America or a ship pulling into port. They do a lot of talking. They may or may not actually consummate any sort of sexual relationship. And, perhaps most importantly, they never end with a classically happy Hollywood ending. Most romantic comedies, even the most tryst-like (“It Happened One Night,” “Roman Holiday”) don’t quite fit.

Here are seven of the best, presented with an eye on some of the tropes that connect them all.

The Chemistry – “Weekend,” directed by Andrew Haigh

Chemistry seems like an obvious thing to point out in a romance, but these films need a very particular kind. There needs to be the initial awkwardness of a first meeting, but also an underlying logic that makes these two people seem destined to be together. All of this needs to happen in the narrative space of about five minutes. Tom Cullen and Chris New are brilliant, selling every aspect of their short-lived affair. The sexual tension and resolution between them is the most naturalistic of the couples on this list, full of quiet joy and real emotional wisdom from both the actors and the script.

A Touch of Magic – “Friday Night,” directed by Claire Denis

While most of these films draw great strength from their realism, or at least the believability of their premise, the truth is that meetings like this are obviously rare in real life. The best of them know it and have a tendency to hint toward the supernatural. “Before Sunrise” winks in this direction, charming Jesse and Celine with a palm reader in a Vienna restaurant. “Friday Night” takes this one step further, surrounding lovers Laure and Jean with some mysteriously dancing inanimate objects and an otherworldly traffic jam.

The Romanic Locale – “Summertime,” directed by David Lean

“Before Sunrise” has Vienna and “Before Sunset” has Paris. And while neither city is completely unfamiliar for Celine, especially not the French capital, there’s a sense of discovery for both Jesse and the audience. Many of these films feature a backdrop, often one of continental glamor. In “Summertime” Katharine Hepburn falls in love with Renato and Venice equally, from the moment of her first glance at the city from the lagoon. David Lean’s gorgeous romance of an American abroad is still the definitive cinematic representation of La Serenissima in English and should stay that way.

Everybody Else – “Lost in Translation,” directed by Sofia Coppola

While the physical setting is often there to reinforce the romance, the characters on the fringe tend to serve as contrast. Some of this human chatter surrounds the lovers to make them seem more special, unique in a foreign or unfamiliar environment. This is often how Tokyo functions in “Lost in Translation,” though Sofia Coppola’s approach tends to waffle between pitch-perfect and unsettlingly Orientalist. Well-meaning advertisers and oblivious husbands add an air of thrilling exclusivity to the romance, allowing Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson to almost glow up against them.

Sexual Rule-Breaking – “Brief Crossing,” by Catherine Breillat

Warning: We’ve embedded the entire film below, some parts of which are NSFW.

“Anatomy of Hell” might be a more obvious Catherine Breillat film but its brutality and remove from reality make it more of a work of philosophy than a tryst film. The more muted (for Breillat, anyway) “Brief Crossing” on the other hand fits in quite well. It’s a work of transgressive sexual awakening for a married women and a teenage boy on an overnight ferry from France to the United Kingdom. It presents the awkwardness of their encounter with the director’s signature cold distance, which at the same time refuses to judge them. While no other film on this list has a pairing of such moral ambiguity, each of these relationships crosses some boundary with its (often only technically) casual sensuality.

The Confession – “Stuck Between Stations,” directed by Brady Kiernan

Almost every one of these films includes a moment of confession. This total opening of the characters to each other is a cornerstone of sorts, at the heart of the tryst’s resonance. The lovers can be totally honest because of their lack of formal relationship, a driving theme of “Before Sunset” in particular. “Stuck Between Stations” pushes this confessional approach to the brink. The bare truth shared by Becky (Zoe Lister Jones) and Casper (Sam Rosen) about the violence in their past is total. They get to be more truly themselves than ever before.

Recreation of Self – “Certified Copy,” directed by Abbas Kiarostami

“Certified Copy” might be the ultimate example of the genre, or at the very least the culmination of its themes. Author James Miller (William Shimell) and a nameless Juliette Binoche meet in Tuscany. They drive around in the gorgeous countryside discussing authenticity, sharing an artistic kinship with the canvasses of “Weekend.” Their relationship ebbs and flows before our eyes, and eventually shape shifts into something undefinable and without a single interpretation. The two are true with each other, genuine if not honest. Yet this openness isn’t simple or transparent, but rather as infinite and complex as the human character. “Certified Copy” seems to contain every nuance of the tryst but without any necessary reduction. It would make the perfect double feature with anything on this list, and may very well be the most resonant film of the 21st century so far.

Categories: Features

Tags: Andrew Haigh, Before Midnight, Claire Denis, Daniel Walber, Friday Night, Lost in translation, Richard linklater, Sofia coppola, Summertime, Trysts, Weekend

Selasa, 18 Desember 2012

‘The Hobbit’ Makes $13 Million at Midnight, Poised to Set December Box Office Record

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” has only been in theaters for a few hours now, but forecasts are already predicting that the latest epic from Peter Jackson will set a new box office record for a December release.

Thanks to the $13 million “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” made in its midnight release last evening, Box Office Mojo is reporting that the film is well on its way to breaking the mark currently held by “I Am Legend.” By comparison, “I Am Legend” brought in $77.2 million in its opening weekend back in 2007, only $1.7 million of which came from its midnight release.

Of course, “The Hobbit’s” earning potential is somewhat curtailed by its 169 minute run time, which limits the number of showings each theater can present. Still, “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” should benefit enough from both 3D premiums and inflation to pass “I Am Legend” on the charts, presuming mediocre word of mouth doesn’t keep fans away.

Jackson, of course, is no stranger to December blockbusters; all three installments of “The Lord of the Rings” debuted in December, with 2003's “Return of the King” earning $72.6 million in its first weekend. That number, however, was reduced somewhat thanks to a Wednesday release. His 2005 epic “King Kong,” which like ‘The Hobbit” opening on December 14, debuted with $50.1 million.

“The Hobbit” has already set a December debut record by premiering on 4,045 screens nationwide.

Categories: News

Tags: box office, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Jackson

Minggu, 10 Juli 2011

Nostalgia, Homages, Midnight in Paris, and Super 8

This past weekend I took in two very different but pretty terrific films: J.J. Abram’s Super 8 and Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris. Both films deal with the past. One film pays homage to what some would call the golden age for one of our greatest filmmakers, and the other film deals with the very concept of a golden age, or if such a thing even exists. After Allen’s film, a friend and I began to recall our own histories, talking about films that got us into movies in the first place and films that continued to have significant impacts well past our childhoods. Together, films like There Will Be Blood, E.T., J.F.K., Bottle Rocket, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Die Hard, The Social Network, Jaws, Punch-Drunk Love, Star Wars, The Thin Red Line, Pulp Fiction, and Magnolia were mentioned. These were films that stayed with us for one reason or another. They’ve affected us in significant ways and helped fashion what we love about the medium. We got to talking about the independent film movement in the late ’80s-early ’90s and how exciting it was when films like Drugstore Cowboy, Sex, Lies and Videotape, Reservoir Dogs, and even Clerks were popping out and how that excitement has kind of dwindled. Those were the good ol’ days, right?

I’ve always felt nostalgia could be a nice crutch in life. I’m not talking about living in the past. I’m not talking about a lack of perspective. As we get older we get more analytical, more guarded, and with good reason. Through experience we have gained perspective as we shed ourselves of our more naive skins. Practicality and then cynicism looms over our jaded selves. When cynicism gets out of hand, it can make us a lot less happy, enjoy less. It can be toxic. We may even become cynical a-holes (in fairness, the The Zookeeper can do that to anyone). So when I say nostalgia can be good, I mean it helps remind me of where I’ve come from and how I came to be the person I am today; I’m talking about the reflective acuity the past allows for the present, or even the future. I believe it’s good for the soul.

Some circles have accused Super 8 of using nostalgia as a crutch, which doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. You can’t direct nostalgia. What is nostalgic for me may not be nostalgic for you. But the common thread of nostalgia is innocence, or at least a perceived innocence or a perceived purity. It can be an innocence of the mind (childhood, past relationships, old locations) or of a medium (types of films). What you can do — and what Abrams I feel does very successfully — is take everything he loved about Steven Spielberg’s Old Testament offerings and try to share that with the rest of us. If it works, it perhaps evokes feelings of nostalgia for an individual as it reminds us of the types of films we used to get from a master of cinema. But it can’t actually be those films for me because I’m not 8 years old anymore.

Admiring what Abrams accomplished isn’t a case of living in the past either. That’s too easy a dismissal and more than a little condescending. It’s the difference between celebrating what we love from those more innocent times and wishing, say, Hollywood would simply “Make’em like they used to.” In Super 8‘s case, it’s about paying homage to early Spielberg. In Midnight in Paris, however, Owen Wilson does wish they made it like they used to, only he’s referring to life. He pines for the days in Paris when giants like Hemingway, Scott and Zelda, or Cole Porter could be spotted walking out of the Moulin Rouge. Here is a man who literally would like to live in the past. We sometimes look at our own pasts through gold-filtered lenses, and Allen says it is perhaps even more dangerous to harken back to a time you didn’t even experience. In life, in real life, romanticism leaves in a hurry. It is not only unhealthy to live in your own past, it is unhealthy to pretend you can live in any golden age. More to the point, there is no golden age. There is always struggle and there is always pain, and we will never have the benefit of a future perspective in our present reality.

With the experiences that life affords us, however, you can choose to engage in the spirit you still treasure of that past time. Abrams engaged in this spirit. And at the end of the Allen’s film, Wilson’s character chooses Paris not because he is a fool or duped into thinking he can relive his youth. He is fairly collected and clear-headed. He understands life throws curve balls and that he even may be making a mistake. But he also understands that if he doesn’t try to live the kind of life he always wanted to live, if he doesn’t try to be the person he always wanted to be, he will continue to be lost and he will continue to be disappointed and he will continue to wonder.

In Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia (one of those impact films mentioned earlier), there is a very foreboding message repeated in the film: “We may be done with the past, but the past isn’t through with us.” I’ve always understood the darker connotations in this message, but later it inspired a different reading; that it is just as much a positive assurance as it is a threat (the film’s many outcomes are further evidence). As a guy who tries to use my past failures and successes to an advantage today; who will continue to assess who I am and why I am; who will always love Spielberg’s early films, who will always treasure all there is to treasure from the all the “golden ages” from which one could choose, be it Paris in the ’20s or the Nintendo era of the ’80s, it’s a pretty comforting thought.

Jumat, 24 Juni 2011

FILM WANGAN MIDNIGHT LIVE

FILM WANGAN MIDNIGHT LIVE

Tanggal Rilis :09/12/2009
Jenis Film :DRAMA I RACING
Diperankan Oleh :Kazuki Kato, Ryoko Koboyashi, Yuichi Nakamura, Kosuke Yonehara

Ringkasan Cerita FILM WANGAN MIDNIGHT LIVE :

Film ini berdasarkan manga yang dikarang oleh Michiharu Kusunoki, bintang film Yuichi Nakamura D-Boys, Kato Kazuki, dan Ryoko Kobayashi. Inti cerita pada seorang pemuda bernama Akio Asakura, seorang siswa kelas 3 SMA, mengendarai mobil Datsun Fairlady custom-tuned S30Z dengan sejarah kutukannya.

Dia mendapatkan mobil impiannya dari tempat barang rongsokan dan langsung membelinya. Dan cukup lama, ia baru bisa menemukan bahwa mobil itu cepatnya berbeda dengan mesin L28 yang terpasang, dilengkapi dengan turbo kembar. Akhirnya dia tahu bahwa pemilik sebelumnya meninggal dalam kecelakaan yang mengerikan di Wangan. Setiap orang yang mengendarai Z lepas kendali dan menabrak, seolah-olah mobil itu berontak dan susah dikendalikan oleh pengemudinya. Karena itu Z biru dijuluki “The Devil Z”.

Download filenya dibawah ini:

PART 1

PART2

PART3

SUBTITLE INDONESIA

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