FSLC AND DFA ANNOUNCE LINEUP FOR DANCE ON CAMERA FESTIVAL, FEBRUARY 12-16

The 44th edition of Dance on Camera Festival marks two landmark occasions: the 60th anniversary of the founding of Dance Films Association, which co-presents the festival with the Film Society of Lincoln Center, and the 20th anniversary of the partnership between the two arts organizations on this unique event.

This year’s edition presents audiences with the worlds of ballet, jazz, and contemporary dance; modern and postmodern legends and discoveries, such as the focus of the Closing Night film, Jack Walsh’s Feelings Are Facts: The Life of Yvonne Rainer; flamenco in gypsy enclaves as well as explorations into artistic expression and innovative therapy; stories from a country where women choose to dance despite a cultural bias against it; and, in addition to spotlighting the more traditional forms of dance, the lineup also delves into the exciting world of trapeze—sometimes referred to as “ballet of the air”—in the Opening Night film, Tom Moore’s The Flight Fantastic.

“Celebrating dance in all its many shapes and colors is this festival’s mantra,” said Joanna Ney, co-curator, with Liz Wolff, of the 44th edition. “Diversity, passion and commitment are, as ever, the watchwords of Dance on Camera Festival. From Carmen Amaya’s legacy as seen in her progeny in Bajarí to a remote corner of Québec where a dancing school offers life lessons, to Horizons, a salute to Cuba’s love affair with ballet, the accent is on maintaining tradition as well as looking to the future.”

“Dance on Camera allows for a legacy in dance to be honored and preserved, and this year we highlight this with some of the great male dancers and pioneers: Ted Shawn in The Men Who Danced, Eugene Louis “Luigi” Faccuito in the panel discussion Luigi: Hollywood, Broadway and Beyond, and Alvin Ailey in Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance. Their accomplishments and innovation have formed generations of great dancers,” said Liz Wolff.

Highlights include:
In-Person Appearances: legendary ballerinas Natalia Makarova (Kirov, ABT, Royal & freelance) and Merrill Ashley (NYCB for 30 years).

A tribute to the great jazz innovator Luigi (Faccuito) with the free panel discussion Luigi: Hollywood, Broadway and Beyond, followed by a screening of Vincente Minnelli’s classic American musical The Band Wagon, in which he appears with Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse.

Meet the Artist with Pat Birch: The festival welcomes the award-winning choreographer to share career insights into her work for stage, screen, and television, including being the mastermind behind the hand jive in the musical hit Grease.

A screening of Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance - Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, followed by a Q&A with special guests.

Retrospective Highlights: Dance Films Association launches its 60th season with a series of retrospective screenings, featuring significant and compelling films from its six decades of innovative programming. Bessie: A Portrait of Bessie Schonberg about the inspiring mentor and teacher, which will feature directors D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus in personThe Men Who Danced, the story of Jacob’s Pillow founder Ted Shawn and his original all-male troupe; and Lar Lubovitch at Jacob’s Pillow, featuring the choreographer and some of his signature works. These programs represent the rich history that Dance Films Association brings to this unique programming and the special anniversaries marking the potency of the dance cinema genre.

An advance screening of German Kral’s Our Last Tango, featuring Maria Nieves Rego and Juan Carlos Copes, tango’s explosive partnership that ignited audiences for over 40 years.

Tickets go on sale Tuesday, January 12. A pre-sale to Film Society and Dance Films Association members begins Thursday, January 7. Single screening tickets are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for FSLC and DFA members. See more and save with the All Access Pass or 3+ film discount package. Visit filmlinc.org for more information.

FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS

Opening Night
The Flight Fantastic
Tom Moore, USA, 2015, DCP, 98m

This fascinating look at the world of the flying trapeze centers on one of its greatest acts of all time, The Flying Gaonas. First performing on a trampoline, the Gaonas went on to become a star attraction for the best circuses in the world, including Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey. Director Tom Moore brings their story to life through interviews with family members and colorful archival material gleaned from a variety of sources. The Gaonas light up the screen with their charismatic personalities as we see them pass the torch on to new generations through teaching and coaching. New York Premiere

Screening with:
Love Songs for Robots
Chris Lavis & Maciek Szczerbowski, Canada, 2015, digital projection, 4m

Inspired by the ballet and sculpture of avant-garde artist Oskar Schlemmer, and featuring performances and choreography by Mistaya Hemingway (La La La Human Steps), Love Songs for Robots is an attempt to create the sort of film Martians might make for humans. New York Premiere
Friday, February 12, 8:00pm
 (Q&A with Tom Moore, Tito Gaona, and Chela Gaona)


Closing Night
Feelings Are Facts: The Life of Yvonne Rainer
Jack Walsh, USA, 2015, DCP, 82m

In the 1960s, Yvonne Rainer revolutionized modern dance as a co-founder of Judson Dance Theater. There, she introduced everyday movements into the dance lexicon, creating “Trio A” and other influential pieces that initially left audiences perplexed but inspired a devoted following. In the ’70s and ’80s, Rainer turned to film, introducing narrative techniques to avant-garde works and consequently turning the genre on its head. This revealing documentary is her story. From her bohemian upbringing to her private and public life as a radical artist, Rainer broke all the rules and created new ones only to reinvent herself time and time again. At 80 years old, she still looks at dance with an explorer’s heart, choreographing pieces that continue to defy assumptions about art and performance.

Screening with:
Public Displays
Michael Kirsch, USA, 2014, digital projection, 4m

Imagine not being able to hold hands, link arms, kiss, or even touch the person you love for fear of disapproval. Michael Kirsch explores this idea as it plays out in the LGBT community, where self-censorship is an everyday reality. New York Premiere
Tuesday, February 16, 8:00pm
 (Q&A with Yvonne Rainer and Jack Walsh)

After the Curtain
Emelie Mahdavian, USA, 2015, digital projection, 70m
Russian, Tajik, and Shugni in English subtitles

In Emelie Mahdavian’s After the Curtain, four female dancers battle shifting cultural norms and face increasing disfavor in the Post-Soviet, predominantly Muslim nation of Tajikistan. The women weigh their love of art against economic hardship, loneliness, and social reproach in this intimate portrait, which also celebrates the rich dance and music culture of a Central Asian country largely unknown in the West. World Premiere

Screening with:
Plow Plant Reap
Marta Renzi, USA, 2015, digital projection, 13m

Against a majestic landscape of rolling farmlands, an all-female community comes together to join in a baptism and a roundelay. With hints of Appalachian Spring and Amish customs, the piece is performed by members of the Slippery Rock University dance department. New York Premiere
Tuesday, February 16, 3:30pm
 (Q&A with Emelie Mahdavian)

Bajarí
Eva Vila, Catalonia/Spain, 2013, DCP, 84m
Spanish with English subtitles

Flamenco is passed down along the family in the gypsy community that gave us the icon Carmen Amaya. Carmen’s spirit hovers over the extended family bearing her name—true relatives and adopted “cousins” passionate about their music and dance. The flamenco odyssey begins when Carmen’s grandniece Karime arrives in Barcelona in search of her roots. When her mother Mercedes Amaya (“Winny”) joins Karime from Mexico to put on a show with some of the city’s musical talent, they discover the spirit of Bajarí—the word for Barcelona in Caló, the language of the gypsies. New York Premiere
Saturday, February 13, 6:00pm
 (Q&A with Eva Vila) Director’s appearance made possible with the generous support of the Institut Ramon Llull.

Ballerina: Program 1, “Body and Soul”
Derek Bailey, UK, 1987, Digibeta, 63m

Natalia Makarova is considered one of the great ballerinas of her time, whose flawless Kirov Ballet training made her a role model for future dancers. Dance on Camera celebrates her 75th year by presenting “Body and Soul,” the first segment of the Emmy-nominatedBallerina series that she conceived, wrote, and narrated for BBC TV. Unseen for many years, the four-part documentary, from which Program 1 will be shown, examines the qualities that define a true ballerina, with Makarova sharing rare footage of legendary figures Maya Plisetskaya, Margot Fonteyn, Carla Fracci, and the remarkable Sylvie Guillem when she first joined the Paris Opera Ballet. Choreographers Frederick Ashton, Jerome Robbins, and Maurice Bejart provide additional commentary. 

Followed by:
Excerpts from Makarova’s personal archive, including selections from her signature roles in OneginManonSwan Lake, and more. (Digibeta, 20m)
Saturday, February 13, 3:15pm (Followed by an onstage appearance by Natalia Makarova)

The Band Wagon
Vincente Minnelli, USA, 1953, 35mm, 112m

One of the greatest musicals of all time, Vincente Minnelli’s The Band Wagon features stunning choreography by Michael Kidd, including the memorable “Dancing in the Dark” sequence in Central Park, and a clever script by Betty Comden and Adolph Green. The film centers on a musical movie star (Fred Astaire) who fears his career is about to hit the skids, until two friends (Oscar Levant and Nanette Fabray) write a script for him that becomes Broadway-bound. But just as things begin to look promising, an egotistical director (Jack Buchanan) joins the project and casts ballerina Gaby Gerard (Cyd Charisse) as the leading lady. Tensions rise between the two co-stars, who clash immediately and whose temperaments threaten to capsize the show.
Sunday, February 14, 8:00pm

Bessie: A Portrait of Bessie Schonberg
Chris Hegedus & D.A. Pennebaker, USA, 1998, digital projection, 58m

Bessie Schonberg danced with Martha Graham until a knee injury forced her to quit and turn to teaching. For the next 70 years, her passion for dance inspired and challenged many important dancers and choreographers, including Merce Cunningham, Jerome Robbins, Meredith Monk, Lucinda Childs, and Ronald K. Brown. The prestigious New York Dance and Performance Awards, informally known as the Bessie Awards, was named in her honor. Bessie narrates her own incredible story in Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker’s documentary, which is intercut with personal and archival footage that includes her teaching choreography at Juilliard, Dance Theater Workshop, and Jacob’s Pillow.

Screening with:
The GOLDs
Sue Healey, Australia, 2015, DCP, 34m

The GOLDs (Growing Old Disgracefully) are a group of lively Australians, aged 60 to 90 years, who, after retiring from a range of careers, now live to dance. Despite their aging bodies, The GOLDs demonstrate what works for them: dancing together and exercising their desire to continue learning. U.S. Premiere
Monday, February 15, 1:00pm
 (Q&A with D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus)

Dance Emergency / Damhsa na heigeandala
Deirdre Mulrooney, Ireland, 2014, DCP, 52m
Irish with English subtitles

A forgotten chapter of modern dance history is revealed in Deirdre Mulrooney’s account of Erina Brady, an Irish-German dancer who, shortly before World War II, brought German expressionist modern dance (Ausdruckstanz) to a conservative, neutral Ireland. There, Brady, the daughter of a former Irish priest who was initially mistaken for a Nazi spy, opened a dance school to teach the Mary Wigman technique. Her dramatic story, framed within the context of Ireland’s thriving contemporary dance scene, comes to life with scenes reenacted by the brilliant Olwen Fouéré, and choreographed by Jessica Kennedy. North American Premiere

Screening with:
The Birch Grove
Gabrielle Lansner, USA, 2015, DCP, 21m

In this film about the power of family ties, inspired by the eponymous novella by Polish author Jaroslaw Iwaszkiewicz, two brothers caught between love and death wrestle with their past in a dance toward reconciliation.
Friday, February 12, 6:00pm (Q&A with Deirdre Mulrooney) Director’s appearance made possible with the generous support of Culture Ireland.

The Dance Goodbye
Ron Steinman, USA, 2015, digital projection, 56m

Merrill Ashley is remembered as one of New York City Ballet’s reigning ballerinas—a leading interpreter of Balanchine roles famous for her racehorse speed and purity of style. After 30 years with the company, Ashley retired in 1997, having sustained numerous injuries during her tenure. Ron Steinman’s candid portrait raises the question, “What next?”—a dilemma so many dancers face when the body no longer works to their standards. The documentary catches Ashley in career crisis as she copes with her loss and plans her next steps, making her way from a farewell performance to rounds of doctors’ appointments, workouts, and teaching duties. A voyage of self-discovery with the ballerina as guide, The Dance Goodbye is a treasure trove of personal photos and performance videos that bring a brilliant career to vivid life. A First Run Features release. World Premiere

Screening with:
David
Loughlan Prior, New Zealand, 2014, DCP, 13m

A dance narrative set against the backdrop of New Zealand’s coastline, Loughlan Prior’s David features two parallel storylines that examine the title character’s young life and those he has come to share it with. U.S. Premiere
Sunday, February 14, 6:00pm
 (Q&A with Merrill Ashley, Ron Steinman, and Eileen Douglas)

Dance With Them
Béatriz Mediavilla, Canada, 2014, digital projection, 94m
French with English subtitles

Located in a remote corner of rural Québec, the PRELV dance school has been run by choreographer Lynn Vaillancourt for 45 years. Employing a unique approach, she teaches singing and many forms of dance, to her students—aged 4 to 20—and also offers them important life lessons, on such subjects as the spirit of cooperation and mutual respect. A black-and-white charmer, Dance with Themis full of humor and dramatic incidents involving children and teenagers on their way to young adulthood. U.S. Premiere
Tuesday, February 16, 1:00pm
(Q&A with Béatriz Mediavilla)

Disportrait
Alejandro Alvarez & Ulrik Wivel, Denmark, 2014, DCP, 52m
Spanish with English subtitles

After transforming Madrid’s Compañía Nacional de Danza into one of the most successful dance companies in the world, Spanish choreographer Nacho Duato is fired. Soon after, Russian billionaire Vladimir Kekhman lures Duato to St. Petersburg and puts the international contemporary dance icon in charge of a major classical ballet company, making him the first foreigner to do so in over 100 years. In this revelatory documentary about an artist in transition, Duato accepts the challenge of modernizing the traditionalist Russian troupe, even as it plunges him into cultural and social isolation. U.S. Premiere

Screening with:
TACTUM: Elements of Dance
Krzysztof Stasiak, Poland, 2015, digital projection, 28m
Polish with English subtitles

According to Ayurveda, the Hindu science of health and medicine, there are three forces that give color to our existence: Green (Kapha), a combination of the elements of water and earth;
Red (Pitta), of fire and water; and Blue (Vata), of air and ether. Inspired by this philosophy, director Krzysztof Stasiak opens a window to an imaginary world as well as to the creation of a series of dances charged with emotion and infused with serenity. U.S. Premiere
Friday, February 12, 3:30pm
 (Q&A with Alejandro Alvarez)

Enter The Faun
Tamar Rogoff & Daisy Wright, USA, 2014, digital projection, 68m

In Tamar Rogoff and Daisy Wright’s documentary, an unlikely collaboration between a veteran choreographer and a young actor with cerebral palsy delivers astonishing proof that everyone is capable of miraculous transformation. As Rogoff trains Gregg Mozgala to dance in her performance, the two discover that her lack of formal medical training and his fears and physical limitations are not obstacles but the impetus for her choreography and their unprecedented discoveries. Enter The Faun is the story of a joyous, obsessed journey toward opening night, challenging the boundaries of medicine and art as well as the limitations associated with disability.

Screening with:
Martiality, Not Fighting
Marianne M. Kim & Cheng-Chieh Yu, China, 2012, digital projection, 10m

Martiality, Not Fighting follows a young Chinese dancer performing the role of conscientious objector. Moving through the pedestrian and the abstract, he reflects on the question “to fight or not to fight.” The choreography is infused with images drawn from postmodern dance as well as the martial art Ba Gua Zhang. New York Premiere
Sunday, February 14, 3:15pm
 (Q&A with Tamar Rogoff and Daisy Wright)

Horizons / Horizontes
Eileen Hofer, Switzerland, 2015, DCP, 71m
Spanish with English subtitles

Since its founding, the National Ballet of Cuba has produced many remarkable dancers. Eileen Hofer’s film focuses on three generations of Cuban-born dancers who demonstrate their love and passion for ballet: legend and local hero Alicia Alonso, now 93, the prima ballerina assoluta who founded the classical ballet company; Viengsay Valdes, a rising star; and young Amanda, who dreams of being accepted to the company’s prestigious school. Interweaving their stories as if with an impressionist painter’s brush, Hofer creates a portrait of three exceptional women for whom their native soil is a source of pride, despite the hardships they endure. Archival footage of Alonso in her prime poignantly contrasts with the frail nonagenarian who can still rise to the occasion. New York Premiere

Screening with:
Cubano Bas
Kathy Rose, Cuba, 2015, digital projection, 3m

Kathy Rose’s Cubano Bas shows a mysterious rite with poetic music by Greg Boyer. New York Premiere
Saturday, February 13, 1:00pm


Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance - Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Matthew Diamond, USA, 2015, DCP, 104m
You don’t just see an Ailey performance, you feel it. And now you can experience the astounding Ailey dancers in an even deeper way as they make their big screen debut.  The program of four audience favorites includes: Wayne McGregor’s sumptuous Chroma, with a score by Jack White and Joby Talbot; Ronald K. Brown’s powerful Grace, with music by Duke Ellington, Roy Davis Jr., and Fela Kuti; artistic director Robert Battle’s humorous, high-flying Takademe; and Alvin Ailey’s beloved masterpiece, Revelations, that will rock your soul. 
Monday, February 15, 6:00pm (Q&A with Matthew Diamond, Bennet Rink, and Andrew Wilk)

The Men Who Danced: The Story of Ted Shawn’s Men Dancers and the Birth of Jacob's Pillow 1933-1940
Ron Honsa, USA, 1985, Digibeta, 60m

The Men Who Danced tells the story of modern-dance pioneer and Jacob’s Pillow founder Ted Shawn, and his mission to create an all-male dance company. Featuring interviews with eight of the original Denishawn Dancers and rarely seen footage of the company performing in the 1930s, Ron Honsa’s documentary provides powerful insight into the early days of Jacob’s Pillow and the determination and strength of character needed to build a world-renowned dance institution.

Screening with:
Lar Lubovitch at Jacob’s Pillow
Lawrence Ott, USA, 1981, DCP, 24m

Made to promote the Lar Lubovitch Company abroad, Lawrence Ott’s “time capsule” documentary—rarely screened in the past 35 years—features footage of signature repertory works including“Exsultate Jubilate,” “Marimba,” “Beau Danube,” and “Cavalcade,” featuring the dancers Peggy Baker, Rob Besserer, and Doug Varone. The choreographer himself appears in interview segments as well as scenes depicting him at work in the studio.
Sunday, February 14, 1:00pm (Moderated discussion with Norton Owen and Ron Honsa)

Our Last Tango
German Kral, Germany/Argentina, 2015, DCP, 84m
Spanish with English subtitles

Our Last Tango is a love story involving perhaps the most famous couple in tango history and their shared passion for the partnered dance. Now in their eighties, María Nieves Rego and Juan Carlos Copes met when they were 14 and 17, respectively, and have danced together for nearly 50 years, memorably in the Broadway smash hit Tango Argentino. Off the dance floor, they loved and hated each other in equal measure, broke up and reunited, but always generated sparks as performing partners. Now toward the end of their lives, the pair share their tempestuous personal history with a group of young tango dancers and choreographers in Buenos Aires, who transform the couple’s personal drama into sizzling dance numbers. Soul-searching interviews and documentary highlights create an unforgettable odyssey into the heart of tango. A Strand Releasing release.
Monday, February 15, 8:30pm

Rare Birds
T.M. Rives, USA, 2015, digital projection, 59m

T.M. Rives’s documentary follows Swedish choreographer Alexander Ekman during the development of his new Swan Lake production for the Norwegian National Ballet. Rarely has there been such intimate access to the creative process; viewers are offered interviews with the opera house’s army of artists and workers as they construct costumes, sets, and even a lake on which the intrepid dancers rehearse, splashing and sliding. Every aspect of this unique production is documented, including the composition of a new score. As challenges mount, the choreographer maintains a playful mood that keeps everything humming when it is not collapsing. While the final performance is unseen, Ekman’s Swan Lake was a triumph and nominated for the Prix Benois de la Danse in 2014. New York Premiere

Screening with:
Bird
Dunja Jocic & Marinus Groothof, Netherlands, 2015, DCP, 17m

Dunja Jocic and Marinus Groothof’s short tells the story of a young boy’s relationship to his pet bird and to his opera diva mother, who leaves him on his own to play, dream, and possibly get into trouble. New York Premiere
Friday, February 12, 1:30pm

They Are We
Emma Christopher, Australia/Sierra Leone/Cuba, 2014, digital projection, 77m
Spanish, Mende, Krio, Gbande, and Kono with English subtitles

In Central Cuba, the Afro-Cuban ethnic group Ganga-Longoba have kept their African heritage alive in distinct song and dance despite their separation from ancestors by decades of slavery, revolution, and religious persecution. Anthropologist and director Emma Christopher films their music, while traveling across Sierra Leone, and shows people the footage to capture their recognition. In a village without road access, one African looks in wonder and says, “They are we.” Music, dance, and interviews reunite the men and women living in Cuba with their Sierra Leone kin in an overdue celebration of their shared history.  An Icarus Films release.

Screening with:
Je suis un Cheval / I am a Horse
Esther Baker-Tarpaga, USA, 2014, digital projection, 12m

In this unique collaboration between dancer/choreographer Ibrahim Zongo and his horse Sabak, the two are filmed along the streets of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, in a duet of incomparable beauty. World Premiere
Monday, February 15, 3:15pm (Q&A with Emma Christopher)

Shorts Program I (TRT: 67m)
The short form continues to gain ground as the ideal platform for exploring the relationship between dance and film. This year’s Short Film programs are currently stretching the boundaries of the art form. The selection includes the concrete and the abstract and reveals that filmmakers and choreographers are partnering in exciting new ways.
Saturday, February 13, 8:00pm

A Tap Dance in a Circle
Danny Gardner, USA, 2015, DCP, 3m

The Tap Stalker strikes again, this time meeting his unassuming friend on the pier and making him tap dance in a circle... in one take!World Premiere

Targeted Advertising
Mitchell Rose, USA, 2015, DCP, 4m

A sci-fi aerial dance film glimpses a dark future where spambot drones chase a fleeing populace and blast ads for Viagra, hair-loss products, and other exciting values. New York Premiere

SajakThor
Chris Rogy, Cambodia, 2014, DCP, 7m

In Hindu mythology, Aspara is a female dancer, here depicted as peacemaker who delivers a message to the people of Cambodia, a country beset by violence.

Abismo
Pablo Diconca, Canada, 2015, DCP, 6m

Drifting on a raft, a man and a woman dance instinctively and choose the only possible escape.
New York Premiere

The Song of GuQin - Chinese Ink
Alex Wu (Zhen Wu), China, 2015, DCP, 5m

Chinese classical dance is rendered through stunning ink-wash drawings in this part of a series honoring ancient Chinese culture and tradition. World Premiere

Tebe Tasi / Sea Dance
David Palazón, Timor-Leste, 2013, DCP, 9m

Tebe Tasi is a visual interpretation of “Itinerary for a landscape, a symphonic poem” performed by the Orquestra Sinfónica de Radiodifusão Portuguesa, conducted by Leonardo Barros, and recorded from a radio broadcasting in 1983 for the album Symphonic Works by Simão Barreto. U.S. Premiere

Indigo Grey: The Passage

Sean Robinson, USA, 2015, DCP, 6m
A young boy discovers a mysterious gas mask that provides a glimpse into an alternate reality.

Still Light
Andrea Ward, USA, 2015, DCP, 3m

Still Light explores the ways in which movement potential and choreographic ideas underwater can differ from those on the ground, touching on concepts of weight and suspension.

Honeymoon
Marta Renzi, USA, 2015, DCP, 6m

Exotic and erotic, playful and provocative, this duet inspired by the Kama Sutra exposes plenty but never takes itself too seriously.New York Premiere

Descent
Drew Cox & Antoine Marc, UK, 2015, DCP, 5m

A man is inhabited by memories and visions as he approaches his final hours. New York Premiere

Approaching the Puddle
Sebastian Gimmel, Germany, 2015, DCP, 9m

A curious woman, appropriately dressed for a rainy day, explores her environment in an empty parking lot. New York Premiere

A Portrait of Marc Brew
Jamiel Laurence & Lewis Landini, Scotland, 2015, DCP, 6m

A light, bright portrait of a choreographer and teacher whose dance vocabulary finds beauty in restricted movement. New York Premiere

Shorts Program II – Experimental Shorts (TRT: 66m)
Tuesday, February 16, 6:00pm

Yachta-Yadda-Yadda
Pooh Kaye, USA, 2013, DCP, 8m

Director Pooh Kaye’s alter ego, Alexandra, struggles with garden machinery and scrambles in the dirt as she pursues her dream of a backyard duck pond. As she launches her boat, magical events sweep her off course. World Premiere

Néants           
Nellie Carrier, Canada, 2015, DCP, 9m

Four characters see their destiny in free fall. New York Premiere

Mortified: The Contender               
Jacob Stage, Camilla Singh & Jenn Goodwin, Canada, 2015, DCP, 6m

Two women become immersed in their emotional responses to a combative world. Adopting the format of a band to encompass a range of activities, the film creates a sonic experience through movement and mayhem. New York Premiere

The Song of GuQin - Hand Dance               
Alex Wu (Zhen Wu), China, 2015, DCP, 5m

From The Song of GuQin series, this segment shows the beauty of hand dance. New York Premiere

Study #1
Gregory Bennett & Jennifer Nikolai, New Zealand, 2015, DCP, 4m

A dance and motion-capture collaboration, this film explores choreographic prompts and improvisation using 3-D motion-capture technology. The live dancer is inscribed into a 3-D visualization, which references both drawing practice and experimental animation–particularly Len Lye and Norman McLaren and their studies in moving image and sound. New York Premiere

Dance of the Neurons   
Jody Oberfelder & Eric Siegel, USA, 2015, DCP, 5m

Twenty-four dancers embody the birth of neurons, activating the brain and body. Created in consultation with leading neuroscientists.

Martian Mating Moves
Eva Ingolf, USA, 2015, DCP, 2m

A short introduction to the mating habits of Martians. World Premiere

Snags in Palladio                
Michele Manzini, Italy, 2015, DCP, 6m

A series of moving tableaux that reflect the Platonic idea of supreme beauty, as well as its contradictory nature in the modern world.New York Premiere

Su misura
Augenblick, Italy, 2014, DCP, 1m

A tailor and his wife. A day like any other: old and new customers, one after another. Then she enters. Suddenly a glimpse, a mistake... and there’s already a stitch to remove: one more word and the elbows will lightly touch. New York Premiere

Little Dreams
Wilkie Branson, UK, 2015, DCP, 7m

A dance animation about dreams, fears, and aspirations made with over 4,000 hand-cut characters. New York Premiere

know you           
Galen Bremer, Emma Hoette & Zoe Rabinowitz, USA, 2015, DCP, 4m

On a gray day, a weathered sculpture in a public space may go unnoticed if not for the figures weaving through it. Are these two women, or one? The mystery of their circumstances ignites a curiosity for the anonymous subject. World Premiere

The Fallen Circus
Shelly Love, UK, 2015, DCP, 10m

Agnes falls from the sky, landing at the feet of a friendly juggler who tells her the story of “The Fallen Circus.” She explains that her mother was blown away by a big gust of wind and together they set off on a journey to find her. U.S. Premiere

Special Program

Dance and Education in New York City High Schools

Featuring PS Dance!, a documentary film about dance education in public schools, directed by award-winning dance filmmaker Nel Shelby, dance ambassador Jody Gottfried Arnhold, and dance education consultant Joan Finkelstein. Proceeded by a screening featuring the finalists from Capturing Motion NYC, Dance Films Association’s workshop and film competition program for high school students throughout the five boroughs.
Saturday, February 13, 11:00am

Free Events

Dance Films Builds an Archive: DFA Member Meet Up! – Free Furman Gallery Event!

In celebration of Dance Films Association’s 60th anniversary, join us for the release of the preliminary results of our recent item level inventory and stories from the organization’s vault. Filmmakers, historians, curators, librarians, programmers, and dance and film enthusiasts alike are encouraged to attend and bring their own stories in seeking, providing, and using archival material.
Sunday, February 14, 12:00pm
Venue: Furman Gallery, 165 West 65th Street

Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance – Free Amphitheater Event!

Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance launched in the fall of 2015, distributing recorded live performances of Alvin Ailey, Ballet Hispanico, New York City Ballet, and San Francisco Ballet to more than 600 movie theaters nationwide. Join lead creatives and partners for an in-depth conversation on a transmedia approach to presenting dance in order to “bring incomparable performances representing a diverse range of American dance to audiences everywhere.”
Monday, February 15, 5:00pm
Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

Luigi: Hollywood, Broadway, and Beyond

Celebrate one of jazz technique’s great innovators, Eugene Louis “Luigi” Faccuito, with a discussion with Francis Roach, who has taught Luigi technique for over 20 years. After a devastating accident, Luigi created an exercise for his own rehabilitation, which became the first complete technique for learning jazz dance. Luigi’s talent and perseverance gave him the opportunity to work in every part of show business, from burlesque to Hollywood musicals, Broadway, and beyond.
Sunday, February 14, 5:00pm
Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

Meet the Artist With Pat Birch – Free Amphitheater Event!

Honored by Dance Films Association with the 2016 Dance in Focus award, the two-time Emmy Award-winning and five-time Tony nominated choreographer Pat Birch, perhaps best known for being the mastermind behind the hand jive in the film Grease, joins Dance on Camera Festival for Meet the Artist to share insight into her sensational career as one of the most celebrated choreographers for the screen.
Friday, February 12, 5:00pm
Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

Teaching Screendance: Creating a Practice-Based Pedagogy – Free Amphitheater Event!

Inspired by the hybrid practices of filmmakers Douglas Rosenberg and Katrina McPherson, this open forum focuses on ways in which the practice of screendance—in the context of a theoretical and historical framework—can lead to a pedagogy for teaching the dance genre made for the camera. Rosenberg and McPherson will lead the discussion.
Monday, February 16, 12:00pm
Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

Work-In-Progress Screening – Free Amphitheater Event!

Centered on process and discussion, this year’s Work-In-Progress screening will feature a selected film from Dance Films Association’s Production Grant application pool. Moderated by Yara Travieso, an award-winning multimedia director, choreographer, and filmmaker.
Saturday, February 13, 5:00pm
Venue: Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

Art Exhibit – Furman Gallery
Jordan Matter: A Matter of Dance

Jordan Matter, a Manhattan-based portrait photographer selected as one of 2014’s “Top Emerging Artists” by Art Business News, is the author of The New York Times bestseller and international phenomenon, Dancers Among Us (Workman Publishing). The book is a collection of photographs of dancers in everyday situations around the world. O, The Oprah Magazine, Barnes & Noble, NPR, and Amazon selected it as a “Best Book,” and it has been reprinted eight times in five countries. Matter and his work have been featured on television and in print and exhibitions throughout the world, including Reddit, Buzzfeed, ABC World News, The Today Show, the BBC, The New York Times, The Huffington Post, The Tyra Banks Show, the Hudson River Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Seoul, Korea (with two solo shows in two years). He is currently working on his follow-up book, Dancers After Dark (Workman Publishing, 2016), featuring a series of public nudes at night meant to highlight the incredible dedication and vulnerability it takes to pursue a dance career. Selections from both projects will be on display.



SCHEDULE


Screenings will take place at Walter Reade Theater, 165 W. 65th Street
Panels and free events will take place at Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center Amphitheater, 144 W. 65th Street

Friday, February 12

1:30PM    Rare Birds (60m) screening with Bird (17m)
3:30PM    Disportrait (52m) screening with Tactum (28m)
5:00PM    Free Panel Discussion: Meet The Artist with Pat Birch
6:00PM    Dance Emergency (52m) screening with The Birch Grove (21m)
8:15PM    Opening Night – The Flight Fantastic (98m) screening with Love Song For Robots (4m)

Saturday, February 13
11:00AM    PS Dance! (53m) screening with Capturing Motion NYC (5m)
1:00PM    Horizons (71m) screening with Cubano Bas (3m)
3:15PM    Ballerina: Program 1 “Body and Soul” (64m) screening with Archive Excerpts (20m)
5:00PM    Free Panel Discussion: Work-In-Progress Screening (60m)
6:00PM    Bajarí (84m)
8:00PM    Shorts Program I (TRT 67m): Targeted Advertising (4m), SajakThor (7m), Abismo (6m), The Song of GuQin - Chinese Ink(5m), Tebe Tasi / Sea Dance (9m), Indigo Grey: The Passage (6m), Still Light (3m), Honeymoon (6m), Descent (5m), Approaching the Puddle (8m), A Portrait of Marc Brew (6m)

Sunday, February 14
1:00PM    The Men Who Danced (60m) screening with Lar Lubovitch at Jacob’s Pillow (25m)
3:15PM    Enter the Faun (68m) screening with Martiality, Not Fighting (13m)
5:00PM    Free Panel Discussion: Luigi: Hollywood, Broadway, and Beyond (60m)
6:00PM    The Dance Goodbye (60m) screening with David (13m)
8:00PM    The Band Wagon (112m)

Monday, February 15
12:00PM    Free Panel Discussion: Teaching Screendance: Creating a Practice-Based Pedagogy (60m)
1:00PM    Bessie: A Portrait of Bessie Schonberg (60m) screening with The GOLDs (34m)
3:15PM    They Are We (77m) screening with Je Suis Un Cheval (12m)
5:00PM    Free Panel Discussion: Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance (60m)
6:00PM    Lincoln Center at the Movies: Great American Dance – Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (104m)
8:30PM    Our Last Tango (85m)

Tuesday, February 16
1:00PM    Dance with Them (94m)
3:00PM    After the Curtain (70m) screening with Plow Plant Reap (14m)
6:00PM    Shorts Program II (TRT 66m): Yachta-Yadda-Yadda (8m), Néants (9m), Mortified: The Contender (6m), The Song of GuQin - Hand Dance (6m), Study #1 (4m), Dance of the Neurons (5m), Martian Mating Moves (2m), Snags in Palladio (6m), Su misura (1m),Little Dreams (7m), know you (4m), The Fallen Circus (10m)
9:00PM    Closing Night – Feelings Are Facts: The Life of Yvonne Rainer (82m) screening with Public Displays (4m)

Friday, February 12 – Tuesday, February 16
A Matter of Dance by Jordan Matter – in the Furman Gallery

For more information, please visit:

FSLC announces free Ron Howard talk for In the Heart of the Sea, November 22

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The Film Society of Lincoln Center has announced the next of the popular FREE Film Society Talks with director Ron Howard at 5:00pm on Sunday, November 22 timed to his new film In the Heart of the Sea. Talks are sponsored by HBO and include a combination of clips, trailers, and extended conversations with questions from the audience. Additional fall talks to be announced.  

Ron Howard began his career as an actor, playing beloved television roles such as Opie on The Andy Griffith Show and Richie Cunningham on Happy Days before transitioning into film with American Graffiti (1973). He made his feature directorial debut with Grand Theft Auto in 1977 and amassed a body of work that includes Splash (1984), Cocoon (1985), Parenthood (1989),Apollo 13 (1995), The Da Vinci Code (2006), Frost/Nixon (2008), and A Beautiful Mind (2001), which earned him the Oscar for Best Director. 

On November 22, the director will sit down and discuss his career in front of and behind the camera, as well as the making of this new film, In the Heart of the Sea. The film is set during the winter of 1820 when a New England whaling ship was assaulted by a whale of mammoth size and will, stranding its crew at sea for 90 days. In the Heart of the Sea reveals the encounter’s harrowing aftermath as the ship’s surviving crew is pushed to their limits to stay alive. This real-life disaster inspired Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick, and the film stars Chris Hemsworth, Benjamin Walker, Cillian Murphy, Tom Holland, Ben Whishaw, and Brendan Gleeson, and opens in theaters December 11. A presentation of Warner Bros. Pictures, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures, a Warner Bros. Pictures release.


For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org

THE FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER ANNOUNCES DETAILS FOR LYNCH/RIVETTE, DECEMBER 11-22

Dual retrospective pairs seven Lynch and seven Rivette films, including Rivette’s rarely screened Duellewith Lynch’s Lost HighwayL’amour fou with Wild at Heart, and more

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The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced today the details for Lynch/Rivette, December 11-22. Jacques Rivette and David Lynch rank among the most revered and enigmatic filmmakers of the past 50 years, uncompromising iconoclasts with sui generis sensibilities and devoted cult followings. On the occasion of the publication of Dennis Lim’s new book David Lynch: The Man from Another Place, the Film Society presents this dual retrospective, revealing the profound affinities and eerie correspondences between the dark, sometimes mystical, always fascinating visions of these two modern masters.

The seven pairings include Rivette’s Celine and Julie Go Boating with Lynch’s Mulholland DriveL’amour fou with Wild at HeartThe Duchess of Langeais with Blue Velvet, and many more. Some of the couplings are premised on thematic similarities; others on tonal kinships. Each is a suggestive double bill that might allow us to see these films, and perhaps reality itself, anew.

Rivette’s career began as an offshoot from his film criticism of the 1950s and ’60s for Cahiers du Cinéma, where he was a colleague of Truffaut, Godard, and Rohmer, and an omnivorous cinephile; Lynch’s originated in the post-industrial doom and gloom of late-’60s Philadelphia, where he transitioned to filmmaking from painting and sculpture. Rivette eventually found himself working on a grander scale and with some of the most lauded French actors of the post–New Wave period on films renowned for their singular atmospheres, radical use of improvisation, and marathon running times. The success of Lynch’s landmark midnight movie Eraserhead (1977) launched his improbable, up-and-down career, which saw him enshrined as a central figure in American pop culture, influential yet inimitable, with an instantly identifiable if often hard-to-define signature.

Despite these vastly different artistic contexts and trajectories, both filmmakers share a number of pet themes that they have revisited obsessively: secrets, conspiracies, and paranoia; women in trouble; the supernatural manifesting itself within the everyday; the nature of performance and the stage as an arena for transformation; the uncanny sense of narrative as a puzzle without a solution, a force with a life of its own. Their best films act as spells, capable of overcoming characters and viewers alike. They conjure distinctive worlds in which the truth remains unknowable, nightmares masquerade as harmless reveries, and characters change identities amid impossible, self-consciously filmic situations.

Lynch/Rivette coincides with the release of Film Society Director of Programming Dennis Lim’s new book David Lynch: The Man from Another Place (out November 3 through Amazon Publishing/New Harvest and on sale at the Film Society Merchandise Shop), wherein he proposes several lenses through which to view pop culture icon, cult figure, film industry outsider, and master filmmaker Lynch and his distinctive body of work. 

Programmed by Dennis Lim and Dan Sullivan.

Tickets will go on sale Tuesday, November 24 and are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for Film Society members. Make it a Lynch/Rivette double feature and save with our 2-film discount package. Visit filmlinc.org for more information.

Acknowledgments:
British Film Institute; Institut Francais; Cultural Services of the French Embassy; Veronique Manniez-Rivette; David Lynch.


Films, Descriptions, & Schedule


Blue Velvet + The Duchess of Langeais
Young men (Kyle MacLachlan in Blue Velvet and Guillaume Depardieu in The Duchess of Langeais) return home and seek to play hero by redeeming mysterious, troubled women, but their nocturnal visits prove that they’ve bitten off much more than they can chew...

Blue Velvet
David Lynch, USA, 1986, 35mm, 120m

After the failure of the epic sci-fi Dune that nearly ended Lynch’s career, he resolved to make a personal film, and ultimately settled on what would become his undisputed masterpiece of the 1980s, Blue Velvet. After finding a severed human ear in a field, Jeffrey Beaumont (Kyle MacLachlan) discovers, beneath his idyllic suburban hometown, a sinister underworld inhabited by damaged mystery lady Dorothy Vallens (Isabella Rossellini) and her sadistic captor, Frank Booth (Dennis Hopper). The intense color palette, lush Old Hollywood orchestral score, and anachronistic flourishes inch Blue Velvet just past the realm of realism into a space without signposts that gets more disorienting the longer you stay in it. Upon its release, Blue Velvet became an instant cult film and, as more people saw it, a lightning rod for polarized reactions.
Friday, December 11, 6:30pm (Followed by a reception for all ticket holders)
Wednesday, December 16, 2:30pm


The Duchess of Langeais / Ne touchez pas la hache
Jacques Rivette, France/Italy, 2007, 35mm, 137m
French and Spanish with English subtitles

Rivette’s adaptation of Balzac’s novella (contained in his History of the Thirteen, which figured centrally in Rivette’s earlier Out 1) is a costume drama unlike any other, a playful yet moody meditation on the maddening games bound up in courtship. General Armand de Montriveau (Guillaume Depardieu), having returned from the Napoleonic Wars with a limp and a brooding demeanor, quickly becomes enamored of the Duchess Antoinette de Langeais (Jeanne Balibar, hypnotic in her elusiveness and capriciousness). But across a series of nocturnal, candle-lit visitations, the Duchess mercilessly toys with her hot-tempered suitor, as the machinations of a shadowy conspiracy unfold in the background… An absorbing exploration of the selfish passions and competing agendas rumbling beneath the surface of social gentility.
Friday, December 11, 3:30pm & 9:00pm

Celine and Julie Go Boating + Mulholland Drive
Phantom Ladies! Celine and Julie (Juliet Berto and Dominique Labourier) find themselves embroiled in a Henry James–esque plot laden with intrigues as the line between fiction and reality is obliterated. And starry-eyed actress Betty and amnesiac-in-trouble Rita (Naomi Watts and Laura Harring) are caught in a foreboding web of conspiracy that grows more obscure as the real slips into an abyss of Hollywood glitz and gloom.

Celine and Julie Go Boating / Celine et Julie vont en bateau
Jacques Rivette, France, 1974, 35mm, 192m
French with English subtitles

Widely considered Rivette’s crowning achievement, Celine and Julie Go Boating remains perhaps his most enveloping work, a film replete with stories within stories, performances within performances, and the sense of formal gamesmanship present throughout his oeuvre. Eccentric magician Celine (Juliet Berto) meets cute with curious librarian Julie (Dominique Labourier), and their fast friendship sends them down the rabbit hole and into an apparently haunted house. With the aid of magical candy (part acid tab, part Proustian madeleine), they return time and again to the mansion to spy on and eventually play parts in a gothic murder mystery. Co-written by Eduardo de Gregorio and the film’s actresses (including Bulle Ogier and Marie-France Pisier), Celine and Julie Go Boating remains Rivette’s most enduring and influential investigation of the porous boundary between life and art. An NYFF12 selection.
Saturday, December 19, 4:45pm
Monday, December 21, 7:00pm


Mulholland Drive
David Lynch, USA, 2001, 35mm, 147m

Lynch’s ninth feature, widely considered the masterpiece of his late career despite its evolution from an aborted TV pilot, takes its name from the storied Los Angeles road and weaves its plot around the city’s signature industry: motion pictures. Blonde Betty Elms (Naomi Watts in her breakthrough performance) arrives in Hollywood to become a movie star and meets an enigmatic amnesiac brunette (Laura Harring). Around this deepening friendship, Lynch builds a unique puzzle movie, steeped in the romance and artifice of a bygone Hollywood. Lynch’s most favorably reviewed film since Blue Velvet earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Director and landed atop many best-of-the-decade lists. It remains the ultimate expression of Lynch’s deep love-hate relationship with Hollywood. An NYFF39 selection.
Saturday, December 19, 9:00pm
Monday, December 21, 4:00pm


Duelle + Lost Highway
Two dark head movies in which reality turns itself inside out to startling effect. The nightmarish Lost Highway toys with the concept of identity through a bifurcated plot of murderous jealousy and terrifying surveillance, while in the dreamy noir of Duelle, goddesses do battle in an eerily vacant Paris for the right to remain among mortals.

Duelle
Jacques Rivette, France, 1976, 35mm, 120m
French with English subtitles

The first completed episode of Rivette’s planned but never finished tetralogy “Les Filles de feu” (which he later renamed “Scenes de la vie parallele,” and revisited decades later with Story of Marie and Julien), finds the realm of the spirits encroaching upon and transforming reality. Locked in a duel for control of a magical diamond that will enable them to remain on Earth, sun goddess Viva (Bulle Ogier) and moon goddess Leni (Juliet Berto) lock horns in an eerily vacant and uncannily stylized Paris, conscribing a group of mere mortals in the process. Equal parts film noir and avant-garde myth, Duelle inhabits a space between the material and supernatural worlds, and conveys a paradoxical sense that anything can happen and that everything is determined by forces beyond our control and comprehension. No Rivette film has plunged so deliriously into dream logic, and the results are never less than entrancing. An NYFF14 selection.
Friday, December 18, 9:15pm

Lost Highway
David Lynch, USA, 1997, 35mm, 134m

Most of Lynch’s later films straddle (at least) two realities, and their most ominous moments arise from a dawning awareness that one world is about to cede to another. In Lost Highway, we are introduced to brooding jazz saxophonist Fred Madison (Bill Pullman) while he lives in a simmering state of jealousy with his listless and possibly unfaithful wife Renee (Patricia Arquette). About one hour in, a rupture fundamentally alters the narrative logic of the film and the world itself becomes a nightmare embodiment of a consciousness out of control. Lost Highway marked a return from the wilderness for Lynch and the arrival of his more radical expressionism—alternating omnipresent darkness with overexposed whiteouts, dead air with the belligerent soundtrack assault of metal-industrial bands, and the tactile sensations that everything is happening with the infinite delusions of schizophrenic thought.
Friday, December 18, 6:30pm
Sunday, December 20, 2:00pm


Eraserhead + Paris Belongs to Us
Rivette and Lynch’s feature debuts established many of their signature themes and motifs. Eraserhead, the milestone midnight movie that made Lynch’s name, envisions downtown Los Angeles as a stark, expressionistic site of urban derangement, while Paris Belongs to Us transforms the streets (and rooftops) of Paris into a playground (or battleground) for the type of conspiracy plot that would become a Rivette trademark.

Eraserhead
David Lynch, USA, 1977, 35mm, 89m

Sporadically filmed over five years in Los Angeles’s depopulated downtown and on painstakingly fabricated sets, Lynch’s 1977 debut feature nonetheless bears the imprint of his time as a young artist in Philadelphia. The film follows the hapless protagonist, Henry (Jack Nance), with his furrowed brow and electroshock pompadour, navigates an inhospitable nocturnal landscape and struggles with the anxiety of fatherhood. With its meticulous black-and-white cinematography by Frederick Elmes and Herbert Cardwell and groundbreaking sound design by Alan Splet, Eraserhead is a triumph of interiority, a literal head movie that might be taking place within someone’s traumatized skull, and one of the definitive midnight movies of all time.
Tuesday, December 15, 9:15pm

Paris Belongs to Us / Paris nous appartient
Jacques Rivette, France, 1961, 35mm, 140m
French with English subtitles

Wasting no time in establishing the ideas and moods that would concern him for the rest of his career, Rivette’s feature-length debut is an unnerving tone-poem of Parisian paranoia. A young student, Anne (Betty Schneider), immerses herself in a small network of bohemians by way of her brother Pierre and becomes involved with theatrical producer Gerard, who is staging Shakespeare’s Pericles. But it’s not long before her life falls under the shadow of a devious and powerful—though perhaps nonexistent?—conspiracy, as the film mutates into treatise on art and madness in the City of Light, by turns claustrophobic and agoraphobic. The economic constraints of the production lend this sprawling debut a scrappy energy, and the resulting work, as with so many of Rivette’s subsequent films, find the anxieties and terrors of a vintage noir thriller hiding in plain sight amid the urban everyday.
Tuesday, December 15, 6:30pm
Friday, December 18, 3:30pm


Inland Empire + Story of Marie and Julien
Late career masterpieces: Inland Empire is a digressive, uncategorizable Russian Doll of a film, a dread-laden walk through the night and across cinematic worlds within worlds; Story of Marie and Julien is a labyrinthine ghost story that unearths a realm of spirits within a tragic romance.

Inland Empire
David Lynch, USA, 2006, 35mm, 180m

Written one scene at a time and shot piecemeal over a period of three years on a consumer-grade digital-video camera, Inland Empire is a work shaped by the conditions of its creation. The film, filled with disparate segments and parallel worlds, begins when actress Nikki Grace (Laura Dern), in her cavernous Hollywood mansion, receives a visit from a new neighbor (Grace Zabriskie) who foretells the film’s grave, free-falling identity crisis to follow. Inland Empire oozes, miasma-like, across continents—one minute we are in sunny California, the next in snowy Old World Poland—awash with the narrow range of colors and murky contrast of digital video. Some have read Lynch’s tenth feature as a companion piece to Mulholland Drive, but in truth it is a singular and immersive work that sustains and amplifies the Lynchian sensation of dread to proportions never before felt. An NYFF42 selection.
Sunday, December 20, 5:00pm

Story of Marie and Julien / Histoire de Marie et Julien
Jacques Rivette, France, 2003, 35mm, 151m
French with English subtitles

Rivette returns to the “Scenes de la vie parallele” cycle with this moody, surprising, and, ultimately, supernatural love story. Solitary clockmaker Julien (Jerzy Radziwilowicz) is blackmailing a counterfeiter of antique Chinese silks, but his sordid plot is complicated by the sudden appearance of Marie (Emmanuelle Béart), a mysterious woman who bears a strong resemblance to one of his former lovers. They begin a passionate romance, but a sequence of curious, otherworldly events suggests that things aren’t what they seem, and that everything in Julien’s life is connected in ways that exceed the bounds of rational explanation… An erotic and formally audacious take on the ghost story, Story of Marie and Julien is a sublime and moving work that explores fantasy and the body in equal measure to ecstatic, haunting effect.
Sunday, December 20, 9:00pm
Tuesday, December 22, 4:00pm


L’amour fou + Wild at Heart
Two twisted takes on love: in L’amour fou, an intense relationship (between Jean-Pierre Kalfon and Bulle Ogier) unravels in spectacular fashion backstage and behind closed doors amid a wrought theatrical production; in Wild at Heart, the passionate romance between Lula (Laura Dern) and Sailor (Nicholas Cage) burns bright and surrealistically on the open road.

L’amour fou
Jacques Rivette, France, 1969, 35mm, 250m
French with English subtitles

A stage work forms while a marriage collapses in one of the most remarkable of Rivette’s many explorations of the intersection of life and art. Shooting in a dazzling mixture of 35mm and 16mm film stocks, Rivette cuts between an experimental theater company’s rehearsals for a production of Racine’s Andromaque, a television crew shooting a documentary of the performance, and the imploding relationship of the director Sebastian (Jean-Pierre Kalfon) and his actress wife Claire (Bulle Ogier). Gradually, Sebastian and Claire pull each other deeper into a violent emotional vortex until, in the film’s startling, hour-long pièce de résistance, they lock themselves inside their apartment and embark on what the critic Tom Milne termed “a veritable orgy of passion which can be called neither love nor hate.” An NYFF6 selection.
Sunday, December 13, 3:00pm
Thursday, December 17, 2:00pm


Wild at Heart
David Lynch, USA, 1990, 35mm, 124m

With its good and wicked witches, and references to Toto and the yellow brick road, Wild at Heart (based on Bay Area writer Barry Gifford’s homonymous novel) is an overt, elaborate homage to The Wizard of Oz, a “road movie” before the term existed. Lula (Laura Dern) and Sailor (Nicolas Cage) set out from Cape Fear, North Carolina, in a Ford Thunderbird, headed for the obligatory Oz of California but end up detained in the Texas hellhole of Big Tuna. In many ways conceived in direct opposition to Blue Velvet, the film is anxious and scattered where the earlier film was contained and claustrophobic; where sex in Blue Velvet is wrapped up in guilt and terror, this film is as close as Lynch has come to a celebration of libidinal energies. Winner of the Palme d’Or at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival, Wild at Heart is Lynch’s first all-out comedy, but despite the prevailing tone of aggressive absurdity, it nonetheless contains some of the filmmaker’s most harrowing scenes.
Sunday, December 13, 8:15pm
Tuesday, December 15, 4:00pm


Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me + Joan the Maid
Joan of Arc and Laura Palmer: the former is the most filmed saint, the latter became one of the defining saints of American pop culture when she appeared, dead and wrapped in plastic, in the pilot of Twin Peaks. Both works install their martyred female protagonists as the mythological centers of universes defined by emotion and fatalism.

Joan the Maid: The Battles / Jeanne la Pucelle I - Les batailles
Jacques Rivette, France, 1994, 35mm, 160m
French with English subtitles

Sandrine Bonnaire turns in what might be a career-best performance as the titular saint in the first part of Rivette’s materialist take on Saint Joan. Focusing on its heroine’s religious fervor and its psychological foundation, The Battles follows Jeanne as she leads troops into battle in Domremy and Orleans to reclaim the crown of the deposed Dauphin. Bonnaire plays the young Jeanne as zealous and unflappable, and Rivette’s locates her historical significance within the quotidian details of her time. Declining to depict her divine visions, Rivette instead trains his focus on clanking suits of armor, the ruffling of burlap, the ground crunching beneath her boot, soldiers idly sitting around waiting for the fight to come.
Saturday, December 12, 2:00pm

Joan the Maid: The Prisons / Jeanne la Pucelle II - Les prisons
Jacques Rivette, France, 1994, 35mm, 176m
French with English subtitles

Rivette provocatively refuses to stage the oft-filmed trial of Saint Joan in the second part of his epic biopic, instead chronicling Jeanne’s imprisonment and interrogation by the British, culminating in her burning at the stake. The Prisons tracks the fatigue and demolition of the soul that Jeanne endures in prison while also capturing the political machinations unfolding in the background. A hypnotic and moving work, The Prisons wholly involves the spectator in every detail of the road to Jeanne’s saintly fate, tracing a heartbreaking analogy between her persecution and her refusal to accept the role assigned to her by the powers that be. The film’s devastating conclusion confirms Bonnaire’s Jeanne as one of Rivette’s noblest, most resilient and complex heroines in an oeuvre filled with them.
Saturday, December 12, 5:30pm

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me
David Lynch, USA, 1992, 35mm, 134m

Lynch’s harrowing attempt to close the book on both his signature series and arguably his most memorable and tragic character. A prequel to the television phenomenon surrounding the mysterious death of a 17-year-old homecoming queen, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me plunges into the show’s dark heart and defining trauma, chronicling the final week in the brief life of Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee)—a film predestined to end with the death of its protagonist. For Lynch, the entire Twin Peaks project was a laboratory where he worked out some ideas that would define his later films. In Fire Walk with Me, the filmmaker experimented with narrative strictures and structures, and moved toward more direct expressions of emotion, as if the time he spent in the Twin Peaks cosmos allowed him to reduce the film counterpart to its essentials: pain and sorrow, hypnotically and heartbreakingly rendered.
Saturday, December 12, 9:15pm

For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org and follow @filmlinc on Twitter.

FSLC announces details for Action and Anarchy: The Films of Seijun Suzuki

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced today the details for Action and Anarchy: The Films of Seijun Suzuki, November 6-17. In a career spanning nearly five decades, Suzuki amassed a body of work ranging from B-movie potboilers to beguiling metaphysical mysteries. On the occasion of the publication of Tom Vick’s new book Time and Place Are Nonsense: The Films of Seijun Suzuki, the Film Society will present a retrospective of Suzuki’s films, ranging from his greatest hits to a selection of seldom-seen rarities. Tickets go on sale Thursday, October 22. Visit filmlinc.org for more information.

“To experience a film by Japanese B-movie visionary Seijun Suzuki is to experience Japanese cinema in all its frenzied, voluptuous excess.”—Manohla Dargis

Seijun Suzuki first became famous when he was fired by Nikkatsu Studios for making films that, as he put it, “made no sense and made no money.” But it was his freewheeling approach and audacious experimentation that gained Suzuki a cult following in Japan and abroad. Suzuki’s job at Nikkatsu was to make B movies out of scripts that were assigned to him. In the mid-1960s, with dozens such films under his belt, Suzuki’s restlessness began to come through as he and his collaborators, art director Takeo Kimura and cinematographers Shigeyoshi Mine and Kazue Nagatsuka, began experimenting with the assigned material. These films established Suzuki as a stylistic innovator working within—and rebelling against—the commercial constraints of B-movie studio work.

In the 1980s, Suzuki reinvented himself as an independent filmmaker. Freed from the commercial obligations of studio work, he elected to indulge his passion for the Taisho era (1912–26), a brief period of Japanese history that has been likened to Europe’s Belle Époque and America’s Roaring Twenties. Though not linked by plot, these three films—ZigeunerweisenKagero-za, andYumeji—embody the hedonistic cultural atmosphere, blend of Eastern and Western art and fashion, and political extremes of the 1920s, infused with Suzuki’s own eccentric vision of the time.

In the 1990s, a traveling retrospective brought long-overdue attention to Suzuki’s films in the United States and Europe. A new generation of devotees, most notably Jim Jarmusch and Quentin Tarantino, praised Suzuki in the press and referenced his work in their films. Perhaps inspired by this newfound attention, Suzuki returned to filmmaking after another decade-long absence, making two films—Pistol Opera and Princess Raccoon—that look back on his career while advancing it with new technology.

Programmed by Tom Vick, Curator of Film, Freer and Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution, and co-organized with the Japan Foundation.

Tickets will go on sale Thursday, October 22, and are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for Film Society members. See more and save with the All Access Pass or 3+ film discount package. Visit
filmlinc.org for more information.

Films, Description & Schedule

Branded to Kill
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1967, DCP, 91m
Japanese with English subtitles

This fractured film noir is the final provocation that got Suzuki fired from Nikkatsu Studios, simultaneously making him a counterculture hero and putting him out of work for a decade. An anarchic send-up of B-movie clichés, it stars Joe Shishido as an assassin who gets turned on by the smell of cooking rice, and whose failed attempt to kill a victim (a butterfly lands on his gun) turns him into a target himself. Perhaps Suzuki’s most famous film, it has been cited as an influence by filmmakers such as Quentin Tarantino, Jim Jarmusch, Park Chan-wook, and John Woo, as well as the composer John Zorn, who called it “a cinematic masterpiece that transcends its genre.”
Friday, November 13, 5:00pm & 9:00pm

The Call of Blood
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1964, 35mm, 97m
Japanese with English subtitles

Though Suzuki made it in the midst of his stylistic breakthrough, The Call of Blood has never received the same level of attention as other films of his from around the same period. Nikkatsu icons Hideki Takahashi and Akira Kobayashi star as brothers—one a gangster, the other an ad man—who unite to avenge their yakuza father’s death 18 years earlier. The film features a bold use of color; an absurdist climactic gunfight; and, in one memorable scene, an impressively illogical use of rear projection as the brothers argue in a car while ocean waves rage around them. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Tuesday, November 10, 4:45pm & 9:00pm

Capone Cries a Lot
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1985, 35mm, 128m
Japanese with English subtitles

In this surreal comic confection, a traditional naniwa-bushi singer moves to Prohibition-era San Francisco. He goes in search of Al Capone, whom he mistakenly believes is president, hoping to impress the gangster with his singing and to popularize the art form in the States. Filmed mostly in an abandoned amusement park in Japan, Suzuki’s vision of 1920s America is an anarchic collage of pop-culture images, from cowboys to Charlie Chaplin. One reason Capone is so rarely seen is that it reflects the racial attitudes of the time in which it is set by including, for example, a minstrel band in blackface. Such discomfiting images are balanced by scenes featuring an actual African-American jazz ensemble that joins the film’s hero in jam sessions mixing blues, jazz, and naniwa-bushi. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Sunday, November 8, 8:00pm

Carmen from Kawachi
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1966, 35mm, 89m
Japanese with English subtitles

A 1960s riff on the opera Carmen (including a rock version of its famous aria “Habanera”), this picaresque tale sends its heroine from the countryside to Osaka and Tokyo in search of success as a singer. Her journey is fraught with exploitation and abuse at the hands of nefarious men—until Carmen seeks revenge. Mixing comedy, biting social commentary, and Suzuki’s customarily outrageous stylistic flourishes, this fast-paced gem is an overlooked classic from his creative late period at Nikkatsu Studios. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Tuesday, November 17, 2:30pm & 6:30pm

Eight Hours of Fear
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1957, 35mm, 77m
Japanese with English subtitles

When their train is trapped by a landslide, passengers—including a murderer escorted by police officers—pile into a bus to proceed through the rugged countryside. Meanwhile, two bank robbers are loose in the vicinity. As the travelers’ journey continues, the danger mounts and tempers begin to fray. Bizarre camera movements and compositions provide a glimpse of the experimentation that took over in Suzuki’s later films, but Eight Hours of Fear stands on its own as a gripping, eccentric adventure yarn. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Wednesday, November 11, 3:00pm & 7:00pm

Fighting Elegy
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1966, 35mm, 86m
Japanese with English subtitles

Set in the 1930s, this darkly comic film is the story of Kiroku, a high-school student who lusts after the pure, Catholic daughter of the family with whom he boards. The only relief he can find for his immense sexual frustration is through fighting, which at first gets him into trouble, but later makes him perfect cannon fodder for the Sino-Japanese War. As with Story of a Prostitute, the subject of militarism inspired Suzuki to make a highly personal and impassioned work. “One of Suzuki’s indisputable masterpieces, this subversively funny account of the making of a model fascist goes where no film had gone before in search of comic insights into the adolescent male mind” (Tony Rayns). Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Thursday, November 12, 3:00pm & 7:00pm

Gate of Flesh
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1964, 35mm, 90m
Japanese with English subtitles

Part social-realist drama, part sadomasochistic trash opera, Gate of Flesh paints a dog-eat-dog portrait of postwar Tokyo. The film takes the point of view of a gang of tough prostitutes working out of a bombed-out building. When a lusty ex-soldier lurches into their midst, the group’s most sensitive member is tempted to break one of their strictest rules: no falling in love. From the women’s bold, color-coded dresses to the unorthodox use of superimposition effects and theatrical lighting, this is Suzuki at his most astonishingly inventive. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Thursday, November 12, 5:00pm & 9:00pm

Kagero-za
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1981, 35mm, 140m
Japanese with English subtitles

According to film critic Tony Rayns, Kagero-za “may well be Suzuki’s finest achievement outside the constraints of genre filmmaking.” In this hallucinatory adaptation of work by the Taisho-era writer Kyoka Izumi, a mysterious woman named Shinako invites Matsuzaki, a playwright, to the city of Kanazawa for a romantic rendezvous. While Matsuzaki is on his way, his patron Tamawaki appears on the train, claiming to be en route to witness a love suicide between a married woman and her lover. Matsuzaki suspects that Shinako is Tamawaki’s wife, and the trip to Kanazawa may spell his doom. Like Zigeunerweisen before it, reality, fantasy, life, and the afterlife blend together in Kagero-za—most spectacularly during the grand finale, in which Matsuzaki finds his life morphing into a deranged theatrical extravaganza. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Saturday, November 14, 5:15pm (Introduction by Tom Vick)
Sunday, November 15, 4:45pm


Kanto Wanderer
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1963, 35mm, 92m
Japanese with English subtitles

Based on a book by Taiko Hirabayashi, one of Japan’s most famous female novelists, Kanto Wanderer puts a Suzukian spin on the classic yakuza movie conflict between giri (duty) and ninjo (humanity). Nikkatsu superstar Akira Kobayashi plays Katsuta, a fearsome yakuza bodyguard torn between defending his boss against a rival gang leader and his obsession with Tatsuko, a femme fatale who reappears from his past. Suzuki uses this traditional story to experiment with color and to indulge his interest in Kabuki theater techniques and effects, most notably in the stunning final battle, in which the scenery falls away to reveal a field of pure blood red. “As an example of Suzuki’s mid-period output at Nikkatsu, Kanto Wanderer offers us an inspiring sample of experimentation on assignment” (Margaret Barton-Fumo, Senses of Cinema). Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Tuesday, November 17, 4:30pm & 8:30pm

Passport to Darkness
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1959, 35mm, 88m
Japanese with English subtitles

In this stylish film noir, a trombonist goes on an all-night bender after his wife disappears during their honeymoon. When he returns home to find her corpse in their apartment, he sets off on a frantic quest to find her killer by piecing together a night he can’t remember. Suzuki used this classic noir material to play with genre tropes and make expressive use of darkness and light. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Wednesday, November 11, 5:00pm & 9:00pm

Pistol Opera
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 2001, 35mm, 112m
Japanese with English subtitles

When Satoru Ogura suggested that Suzuki make a follow-up to his most notorious film, Branded to Kill, the result was this eye-popping action extravaganza, which is less a sequel than a compact retrospective of Suzuki’s style and themes, updated with CGI effects and infused with the metaphysical concerns of the Taisho Trilogy. Makiko Esumi plays Stray Cat, the number-three killer in her assassins’ guild. She battles her way to the top against characters such as Painless Surgeon, a cowboy who can feel no pain, and the mysterious number-one killer, Hundred Eyes. Along the way, Stray Cat detours into the land of the dead, where her victims lurk, and into the “Atrocity Exhibition,” where she battles foes amid grotesque paintings from throughout art history. Pistol Opera proves that even in his seventies Suzuki’s creativity was still firing on all cylinders. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Monday, November 16, 1:00pm & 6:00pm

Princess Raccoon
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 2005, 35mm, 111m
Japanese with English subtitles

This “energetic, inventive and ever-so-slightly insane mishmash of music, magic and madness” (Mark Kermode, The Guardian) stars Joe Odagiri as a prince. After being exiled, he comes across a magical land of shape-shifting raccoons and falls in love with their princess (Ziyi Zhang). Rooted in Japanese folklore, studded with tunes that range from operetta to hip-hop, and set in a fantastical Edo period of the imagination, this film shows Suzuki at his most kindhearted and whimsical. Although he was pitching a project as late as 2008 (at the age of 85!), this is most likely Suzuki’s final film, and it’s a fittingly friendly way to say goodbye.
Monday, November 16, 3:30pm & 8:30pm

The Sleeping Beast Within
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1960, 35mm, 86m
Japanese with English subtitles

A businessman vanishes upon his return from an overseas trip, and his daughter hires a reporter to help find him. When the father reappears, the reporter becomes suspicious and starts digging deeper, uncovering a secret world of heroin smuggling and murder—all tied up with a mysterious Sun God cult. This proto–Breaking Bad moves to an energetic pulp-fiction beat all the way to its spectacular conflagration of an ending. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Saturday, November 7, 5:00pm & 9:00pm

Smashing the O-Line
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1960, 35mm, 83m
Japanese with English subtitles

This crime thriller features one of the most nihilist characters in Suzuki’s early films: Katiri, a reporter so ambitiously amoral that he’ll sell out anyone—including his partner and the drug dealer he’s sleeping with—to get a scoop. But what happens when an even more ruthless female gang boss kidnaps his sister? With its jazzy musical score and sordid milieu of drug smuggling and human trafficking, Smashing the O-Line is one of Suzuki’s darkest urban tales. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Saturday, November 7, 3:00pm & 7:00pm

Story of a Prostitute
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1965, 35mm, 96m
Japanese with English subtitles

Yumiko Nogawa, one of Suzuki’s favorite actresses, gives perhaps her most ferocious performance in this scathing portrayal of Japanese militarism during the lead-up to World War II. Sent with six other comfort women to service a garrison of some 1,000 men in Manchuria during the Sino-Japanese War, Nogawa’s Harumi is brutalized by a vicious lieutenant who wants her as his personal property. Meanwhile, she is falling in love with his gentle young assistant. The Taijiro Tamura novel on which the film is based was previously made into a much-sanitized film by Akira Kurosawa called Escape at Dawn (1950). Working in the B-movie arena allowed Suzuki to use the sex and violence expected from the genre to advance the view he shared with Tamura: “that the sex-drive is a crucial part of the human will to live” (Tony Rayns). “This is the movie that proves Suzuki should be lifted out of the limiting category of the Asia Extreme cult directors, the ‘Japanese Outlaw Masters,’ and placed at the grown-ups’ table, alongside Kurosawa, Okamoto, and Kobayashi” (David Chute, Criterion Current). Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Tuesday, November 10, 2:30pm & 6:45pm

A Tale of Sorrow and Sadness
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1977, 35mm, 93m
Japanese with English subtitles

Nearly a decade after being fired by Nikkatsu Studios, Suzuki returned to the director’s chair with this titillating tale of a model who is groomed to become a professional golfer as a publicity stunt. When she turns out to be good at the sport, her success leads a deranged fan to hatch a blackmail scheme. “Riddled with the director’s wildly non-conformist use of non-contiguous edits, unhinged shot composition, and violent splashes of colour, crazed and chaotic and for too long buried in the sand bunkers of obscurity, this long-overlooked work simply cries out for revival” (Jasper Sharp, Midnight Eye). Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Sunday, November 8, 6:00pm

Tattooed Life
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1965, 35mm, 87m
Japanese with English subtitles

Set in the 1930s, Tattooed Life is the story of two brothers: Kenji, an art student, and Tetsu, who is working as a yakuza to help pay for Kenji’s tuition. When a hit job goes horribly wrong, the brothers flee. They end up finding work in a mine—and falling in love with the owner’s wife and daughter. But will Tetsu’s gang tattoos reveal the brothers’ secret past? The first film to earn Suzuki a warning about “going too far” from his Nikkatsu bosses, Tattooed Life contains one of his most iconic and audacious violations of film form: a final fight scene in which the floor suddenly and illogically disappears, and the action is filmed from below the actors’ feet. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Friday, November 6, 9:00pm
Sunday, November 8, 4:00pm


Tokyo Drifter
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1966, DCP, 83m
Japanese with English subtitles

Tasked with making a vehicle for actor-singer Tetsuya Watari to croon the title song, Suzuki concocted this crazy yarn about a reformed yakuza on the run from his former comrades. The film is mainly an excuse to stage an escalating series of goofy musical numbers and over-the-top fight scenes. Popping with garish colors, self-parodic style, and avant-garde visual design,Tokyo Drifter embodies a late-1960s zeitgeist in which trash and art joyfully comingle. “With influences that range from Pop Art to 1950s Hollywood musicals, and from farce and absurdist comedy to surrealism, Suzuki shows off his formal acrobatics in a film that is clearly meant to mock rather than celebrate the yakuza film genre” (Nikolaos Vryzidis, Directory of World Cinema: Japan).
Friday, November 13, 3:00pm & 7:00pm

Youth of the Beast
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1963, 35mm, 91m
Japanese with English subtitles

Suzuki himself claims that 1963 was the year when he truly came into his own, and Youth of the Beast is one of his breakthroughs. In his second collaboration with the director, Joe Shishido rampages through the movie, playing a disgraced ex-cop pitting two yakuza gangs against each other to avenge the death of a fellow officer. As the double and triple crosses mount, Suzuki fills the frame with lurid colors, striking compositions, and boldly theatrical effects that signal a director breaking away from genre material to forge a pulp art form all his own. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Friday, November 6, 7:00pm
Sunday, November 8, 2:00pm


Yumeji
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1991, 35mm, 128m
Japanese with English subtitles

Made 10 years after its predecessor, the final film in the Taisho Trilogy spins a fantastical tale from the life of a historical figure. Takehisa Yumeji (1884-1934) was an artist known as much for his paintings of beautiful women as for his bohemian lifestyle. As played by rock star Kenji Sawada, the Yumeji of Suzuki’s film is a serial seducer haunted by thoughts of his own death while pursuing ideals of beauty in his art. Traveling to Kanazawa to meet his lover, he instead falls for a widow whose murdered husband inconveniently returns from the dead. Love, desire, life, and death collapse together as Yumeji’s art takes on an uncanny existence of its own. Print courtesy of the Japan Foundation.
Sunday, November 15, 2:00pm & 7:35pm

Zigeunerweisen
Seijun Suzuki, Japan, 1980, 35mm, 144m
Japanese with English subtitles

Named the best film of the 1980s in a poll of Japanese film critics, Zigeunerweisen takes its title from a recording of violin music by Pablo de Sarasate. The piece haunts the film’s two main characters: Aochi, an uptight professor at a military academy, and his erstwhile colleague Nakasago, who is now a wild-haired wanderer and possible murderer. The movie’s plot is a metaphysical ghost story involving love triangles, doppelgängers, and a blurred line between the worlds of the living and the dead. “Underlying the teasing riddles,” writes film critic Tony Rayns, “is an aching lament for the sumptuous hybrid culture of the 1920s that was swept away by the militarism of the 1930s.” Print courtesy of the Kawakita Memorial Film Institute.
Saturday, November 14, 2:00pm & 8:00pm (Introduction by Tom Vick at 8:00pm screening)

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