Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The Brother From Another Planet

It's been well over a year since I've browsed the aisles of my local video store. I have to admit -- I miss the place. I yearn for the New Release section, the box art you can hold in your hands, the face to face chatting with other renters and store clerks. The thrill-less duty of returning a rental in person is an ache I can live without, especially when you know the rental is three days late and you never found the time to watch it. But returning a video in person is always an excuse to rent another -- then another, and another. 

Fridays nights were always movie night when I grew up. We would load up in the mini-van and head to one of three locally owned video stores in town. More times than not we hit up OK VIDEO. The other two stores, DISCOUNT VIDEO and POP-N-GO VIDEO, were run by honest people, but neither possessed the creative rental strategy of OK VIDEO. Their strategy, in a roundabout way, worked fairly similar to that of NETFLIX -- the more you rent, the cheaper the price it gets. We would rent, at a minimum, five titles on Friday night, many of which we'd seen countless times. MONTY PYTHON, FOOTLOOSE, POLTERGEIST, THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP, RED DAWN, CHEECH AND CHONG, R-rated, Pg-13, Disney, John Carpenter -- our VCR knew no boundaries.  Yet every Friday night there were select films that I would study the box art of, and every Friday night I would put the box back. These were films that were way too sexy, or scared the hell out of me. Most notably, there was Mrs. Robinson seductively pulling at her stockinged raised leg as Dustin Hoffman's Ben Braddock looks on with shirt half-way unbuttoned, his hands in pant pockets, feet bare. "Mrs. Robinson, are you trying to seduce me?

Then there was THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET. As simple as box art gets -- title of the film at the top of the box, and a nondescript still from the film at the bottom. It was that nondescript image though that totally creeped me out! A freaky dude in a red shirt clutching a spray-painted wall -- he appeared to be out of breath from running, and to me, it was obvious there was no where else for him to run. He had reached the end of the line. 

This act of picking up THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET and then setting it back down lasted until just a few weeks ago. Even when the film came in the mail from NETFLIX, I was scared as hell. The director of the film, John Sayles, is an honest guy, as honest as the owners of DISCOUNT VIDEO and POP-N-GO VIDEO. He's an unsung hero of American independent filmmaking -- his one breakout film was 1996's LONESTAR -- though he's been on the scene for three decades. Like Werner Herzog, John Sayles rarely makes the same film twice -- yet unlike Herzog, he's quite centric to the American landscape. He's explored the world of a West Virginia mining community, the wilderness of Alaska, the states of New Jersey and Florida -- all of which, in their own way, seem to be on the outer boundaries. THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET takes place in New York City during the early 80s. I'm looking forward to finally watching it - if anything, to take me back to the aisles of the local video store. 

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Encounters at the End of the World

It's quite easy to admire Werner Herzog from a distance. As a filmmaker and explorer he's often so far removed from everyday life that in the end he comes off as extremely grounded. Yet Werner Herzog is one restless dude. Here's a guy who was one of the last men standing on an island that was near complete volcanic destruction just so he could capture that moment before eruption on film (LA SOUFRIERE). If there's a boat in the middle of a jungle that needs to be drug over a mountain (FITZCARRALDO), look no further than Herzog to get the job done. 


Has hypnotized his actors? (check)
Able to tame the histrionic actor Klaus Kinski? (check)
Has made films in Antarctica, the Kuwaiti Desert, on the Amazon River, in Wisconsin? (check)
Made a movie mostly starring midgets? (check)
Was quoted as saying "Space Travel is unfinished business for me." (check)

What better director to kick off a series titled "STRANGERS IN A STRANGE LAND" than with Werner Herzog. God Bless the man. You could devote the entire series to any of his films. Herzog never got his full due as documentarian until 2005's acclaimed GRIZZLY MAN, and riding on the coat-tails of that fame, he took his cameras the furthest south they'd ever been for ENCOUNTERS AT THE END OF THE WORLD, which we'll be showing on March 25th.  And what a wonderful film it is. In the treasure trove of a book Herzog on Herzog, Werner emphasizes more than once that "If we don't develop adequate images, we will die out like dinosaurs." I can't think of another film of Herzogs' that takes those words any more seriously than ENCOUNTERS AT THE END OF THE WORLD. 

For those interested in exploring other work of Herzog's, I would personally recommend the following film titles, books, and documentaries about him:

Films:
AGUIRRE, WRAITH OF GOD
THE GREAT ECSTASY OF WOODCARVER STEINER
STROSZEK
LITTLE DIETER NEEDS TO FLY

Text:
Of Walking in Ice by Werner Herzog
Herzog on Herzog edited by Paul Cronin

Documentary:
BURDEN OF DREAMS by Les Blank 

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With

Our initiatory theme of SWEET HOME CHICAGO has taken us through vintage Cabrini-Green ghettos, let us ride inside a 1960s-era CTA train car, and brought us back to a time when a young and defiant Bill Ayers looked oddly reminiscent to James Franco.  Now we'd like to end our brief cinema tour of the "City of Big Shoulders" with a modern independent film that features iconography that best describes the Chicago we know today: Wrigley Field, hot dogs, improv, and fat guys in general.

Written, co-produced, directed and starring Curb Your Enthusiasm writer and Second City alum Jeff Garlin, I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With is a sweet comedy that's as easy to take in as an afternoon spent at a Cubs game or lolling around Millennium Park.  Like the town it was filmed in, it's not trying to be something that it's not.  The comedy is genuine, the acting is sincere, and the story line is relatable.  Additionally, the film is soaked with Chicago scenery and landmarks:  the Second City Theatre, Wrigley Stadium, the Music Box, and yes, the Bean--it's all there and it's all very familiar, especially to those who live on the north side of the city.

Originally Garlin's live, one-man performance on the Second City stage, the film follows the journeys of an overweight, down-on-his-luck Chicago actor who still lives with his mother (who, incidentally, is played by Mina Kolb, the same actress who plays his mother on Curb Your Enthusiasm) and just lost his job.  "Major hottie" Sarah Silverman co-stars, along with a slew of Second City alumni, making this the perfect finale to our Chicago film series.