Reviews, profiles and news about movies in Chicago

Review: Tabloid

Adventure, Documentary, Recommended, Romance No Comments »

RECOMMENDED

There was a Sunday night back in mid-2010 when intermittent aphorist Errol Morris took to his Twitter account and sounded surprised, saying something like, Wow, I think I just finished a new movie, as if it had dropped fully formed in his lab. "Tabloid" was the result and it's a quirky quickie, as he turns a single-day interview with the bizarre, emphatic Joyce McKinney, into another meditation on storytelling and truth, with 1960s-tabloid style storytelling, alleged sex kidnappings, obsession, alleged Mormon conspiracies and Korean dog-cloning thrown into the mix. More recently, Morris' appearances with the film have been shadowed by McKinney, who doesn't love the giddy romp that her life's become on screen, and Morris marvels that these Q&As, with McKinney joining him on stage, are often longer than the film's taut eighty-eight-minute running time.  Read the rest of this entry »

Review: Cropsey

Documentary, Horror, Mystery, Recommended No Comments »

RECOMMENDED

Joshua Zeman and Barbara Brancaccio’s very smart, genuinely troubling “Cropsey” revisits a tale that had been told when they were children on Staten Island, a much-embellished urban legend about an escapee from a nearby mental institution. Cropsey was the local bogeyman, the all-purpose chiller of children, handy to keep the tykes in line. But Cropsey was a real man, one Andre Rand, who was tried for the disappearances of disabled local children, and Zeman and Brancaccio’s horror documentary is a real jaw-dropper. Comparisons have been drawn to the fear-filled “Blair Witch Project” and David Fincher’s close, clammy “Zodiac,” as well as Stephen King stories and “Capturing the Friedmans,” yet the parallels are mere flattery, considering the film’s own unique savor, an alternately genial and sinister tone: I’d go more for saying this deeply paranoid chiller plays like Errol Morris in a good mood, sharing his favorite shaggy-dog story about true-life murder. And about true-life suspicion, real-world ambiguity: as in “Zodiac,” you’re hardly certain if Rand is criminal or scapegoat. “Cropsey” is small, but small like an earwig, cozying up in your memory once you’ve seen it. The local, the most personal things, will, at the best instants, always suggest the universal, and “Cropsey” does. Children must have their bogeymen, fear is cultivated like a perennial crop. I don’t want to describe Geraldo Rivera’s role in the story’s unfolding, but he’s a compelling key. (The Ghost Robot production company presentation logo that opens the film is a swift delight.) 84m. (Ray Pride)

“Cropsey” opens Monday at the Music Box; it continues after its Thursday closing on VOD on cable systems until August 12.

Top 50 Films: 2000-2009

The State of Cinema No Comments »

By Tom Lynch01

50. “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” Shane Black, 2005

49. “In America,” Jim Sheridan, 2002

48. “The Lives of Others,” Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, 2006

47. “Pan’s Labyrinth,” Guillermo del Toro, 2006

46. “Best in Show,” Christopher Guest, 2000

45. “Michael Clayton,” Tony Gilroy, 2007

44. “The Dark Knight,” Christopher Nolan, 2008 Read the rest of this entry »

Kreppas, Crisis and Collapse: Chris Smith makes another kind of American movie

Documentary, Horror, Recommended No Comments »

Feat film 12_11_09 collapseBy Ray Pride

One of my favorite new words I learned recently was Icelandic: “Kreppa.”

Depression, collapse crisis, whatever: the crunchy onomatopoeia of “kreppa” struck Reykjavik last year. Roll the eyes, raise the brow: “Eh, it’s the kreppa.” Nearly the same’s the case with Greece. There were riots Sunday over the anniversary of a police shooting in Athens last December; a meltdown of the economic system essentially began this Tuesday morning, with the European Union hoping to “fence off” the strain on its overextended economy. Icelandic mortgages have triggers that may kick in within a few days that demolish the last of home equity among its landholders. These are just countries the politics of which I follow. But food’s still on the table, right? Closer to home, this Monday, a subsidiary of food giant Cargill was again accused of trafficking contaminated meat, weeks after a New York Times exposé of previous incidences of fouled meat.

In the modern world, information wants to be freely deconstructed and recontextualized. You could make a case from disparate strands like these that either leaders are hapless or the future is hopeless, as does Michael Ruppert, the single solitary figure in “Collapse,” a documentary by Chris Smith. Smith is best known for “American Movie,” which, with its post-”X-Files,” post-Errol Morris, post-9/11, mid-paranoiac fashion, could also be the name of this enterprise. Read the rest of this entry »

Review: The Cove

Documentary, Recommended No Comments »

RECOMMENDEDthe-cove-underwater

“The Cove” is filmmaker Louie Psihoyos’ thriller about inhumanity in the food chain, a $2.5 million-budgeted, queasy-making doc in the form of a slick action film that demonstrates the reckless endangerment of the oceans, especially in the harvesting of dolphins for water shows. The central figure is Ric O’Barry, who was the trainer for the dolphins who portrayed Flipper in the show of the same name, and who has tried to atone for his role in popularizing the exhibition of dolphins by becoming an activist in the decades since. Gathering a crew of specialists, including free divers, camera experts and artists from Industrial Light and Magic, who design fake rocks to hide cameras and microphones inside, the film rushes toward capturing the slaughter of hundreds of dolphins in the Japanese fishing village of Taiji. Park operators prefer the female bottlenose dolphin; those that don’t sell are killed in a secluded cove out of view to passersby. Psihoyos’ approach is urgent without becoming strident, although some may resist its open self-comparisons to the “Mission Impossible” and “Ocean’s” movies: “Impossible Ocean” it is. There are echoes of Errol Morris, Michael Moore and “Koyaanisqatsi” director Godfrey Reggio, but the alarming result is its own beast: an activist documentary financed by a billionaire, Netscape founder Jim Clark, working with the kind of dash and flash usually reserved for fiction. The end credits are euphoric in sound and image, and a post-credits scene has an ironic line that creates its own context: “For the children, you see?” 90m. (Ray Pride)

Opening Friday at Landmark Century Centre Cinema.

Review: Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts

Documentary, Recommended, Reviews No Comments »

RECOMMENDED

Australian director Scott Hicks made a smashing debut with “Shine” (1996), but his other work, such as “Snow Falling on Cedars” (1999), has suffered from dramatic inertia atop his accomplished pictorialism. Hicks’ cute-in-the-kitchen “No Reservations” (2007) was scored by Philip Glass, and their working relationship allowed for this procedure-driven doc, “Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts”; reportedly he was also given, from 2005 on, a year-and-a-half of access to Glass. Old friend Chuck Close, whose monumental portrait of a younger Glass is one of the artist’s most iconic works, is among the interviewees, including Ravi Shankar, directors like Martin Scorsese and Errol Morris, who only just made a film without Glass’ signature sound. “Philip does existential dread better than anyone,” Morris says in cheery observation. Woody Allen also consented to Hicks’ presence in his editing room for “Cassandra’s Dream.” There are brief glimpses of the 70-year-old composer’s life not behind the computer, including a confession by his much younger wife that does not surprise. ” Get up early and work all day. That’s the only rule,” Glass says. Hicks’ film demonstrates the results of that ethos. (Ray Pride)

How Do Photographs Mean?: Errol Morris and the esthetics of evidence

Documentary No Comments »

By Ray Pride

At the end of last week, the New York Times set off a secondary firestorm about “Standard Operating Procedure,” Errol Morris’ documentary about the photographs taken by soldiers at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq that led to the exposure of the continued use of the facility, post-Saddam Hussein, for torture.

Morris paid some of his interviewees, but doesn’t specify which were given consultation honoraria. Some writers (and several documentary filmmakers I talked to about this) say this is an abdication of the responsibility of a journalist, or of a generally held consensus of what constitutes documentary practice. But some of the arguments are in a different service, akin to Senator Barack Obama being asked again and again and again to repudiate the Reverend Jeremiah Wright (a request which is never made for Senator John McCain regarding his solicitation of endorsements from even more radical evangelists like John Hagee): by pitching up all manner of fuss about the paid interviews, distraction rules. Like a stage magician’s most essential trick—hey, look over here!—the actual content, the considerable impact, the factual content, the first-hand testimony of the figures, is obscured, denied, forgotten. This, unfortunately, is the true Standard Operating Procedure in contemporary media.

While the endlessly loquacious and deeply political director has made a film about Abu Ghraib and the secondary victims (those who were punished of low rank and those of higher rank who created the atmosphere where such violations were possible were not), he’s more interested in dissecting the meaning of photography. There are thousands of words about meaning and his use of staged recreations at his blog at the New York Times—Morris sometimes jokes he started to make movies so he could talk about them after screenings—but his martially paced, hallucinatory, mordant movie speaks for itself. There is an almost decadent, suffocating stylization to the formalist tendencies of his film, far more elegant than the “torture-porn” of “Saw” and “Hostel” that found its way into the cultural zeitgeist largely because of fears and hostilities since September 11, 2001. Morris’ forceful visual style is grandiloquent, yet its power grows through persistence, alienating at first, then engulfing. “That’s the end result of the whole fuckin’ debacle,” as one disenchanted interrogation professional puts it.

And Errol speaks some more, in a director’s statement: “Is it possible for a photograph to change the world? Photographs taken by soldiers in Abu Ghraib prison changed the war in Iraq and changed America’s image of itself. Yet, a central mystery remains. Did the notorious Abu Ghraib photographs constitute evidence of systematic abuse by the American military, or were they documenting the aberrant behavior of a few ‘bad apples’?”

The late French philosopher Roland Barthes wrote several intriguing essays about photography, several collected in the book, “Camera Lucida.” His quest was for the unspoken layers of meaning, that “which pricks me (but also bruises me, is poignant to me).” Morris is after something similar, largely in collecting in extreme close-up the faces of several of the participants in the picture-making. (Those still in military prison were not allowed to participate.) Writes Morris, “We set out to examine the context of these photographs. Why were they taken? What was happening outside the frame? We talked directly to the soldiers who took the photographs and who were in the photographs. Who are these people? What were they thinking? The Abu Ghraib photographs serve as both an expose and a cover-up. An expose, because the photographs offer us a glimpse of the horror of Abu Ghraib; and a cover-up because they convinced journalists and readers they had seen everything, that there was no need to look further. In recent news reports, we have learned about the destruction of the Abu Zubaydah interrogation tapes. A cover-up. It has been front-page news. But the cover-up at Abu Ghraib involved thousands of prisoners and hundreds of soldiers. We are still learning about the extent of it.”

A primary interviewee is Lynndie England, the small woman seen in the notorious photographs with a thumbs-up gesture, a cigarette curled onto her lip. As one of the women, including Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, who was hung out to dry, she’s indelible. Working class, drawling, rolling her eyes, recalling how, 20 and naïve, she followed “a mahnnn.” Older, dressed for Morris’ camera, caught between the hallucinogenic visual investigations, she’s as all-American as they come. Feral, even. And pissed, too. Morris lingers on her face after she’s spat out a word. After you think she’s gotten it all out. The expressions sear. These faces are an almanac of umbrage. They bristle. It surpasses even the C-Span single-position shot of Jessica Lynch’s congressional testimony, simplicity itself; medium close on the human face. A female face: unformed personalities the equivalent of the portrayal of naïveté by Sissy Spacek in “Badlands.” Did the soldiers betray? Did the photographs betray? Did the superiors betray? And what was betrayed? Honor? Truth? Integrity? The nature of representation? An improbable horror movie about metadata and its discontents: “Standard Operating Procedure” is scorching.

Review: Protagonist

Documentary, Recommended, Reviews No Comments »

RECOMMENDED
Oscar-winning documentarian Jessica Yu, who made the Henry Darger doc “Realms of the Unreal,” traverses Errol Morris-style waters with “Protagonist,” an eccentric but diverting portmanteau study of four men who are obsessive and controlling, partially peopled with a Greek chorus comprised of puppets. Yu was commissioned to make a feature about the work of the Greek playwright Euripides; inspiration followed. Her four protagonists include a German terrorist, a bank bandit turned journalist, an ex-”ex-gay” evangelist and her husband, Mark Salzman, who became fixated on martial arts as a teenager Smart without being overbearing, “Protagonist” is a bright delight. 90m. (Ray Pride)