Sunday, August 31, 2008

THE EMPORER'S NAKED ARMY MARCHES ON















(1987) Director:
Kazuo Hara

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On is a brilliant exploration of memory and war guilt, a subject often ignored in modern Japan. In this controversial documentary, Kazuo Hara follows Kenzo Okuzaki in his real-life struggle against Emperor Hirohito. He proudly declares that he shot BBs at the Royal Palace, distributed pornographic images of the Emperor, and once killed a man for the sake of his strange crusade. As the film progresses, Okuzaki reveals a gruesome mystery: why were some Japanese officers killing their own soldiers during WWII? What happened to their bodies? Okuzaki begs, cajoles, and occasionally beats the story out of elderly veterans. When these old men do break down and talk, their testimonies are some of the most chilling, riveting descriptions of wartime desperation ever committed to film. In his desire to unearth these horrors, Okuzaki's behavior grows increasingly extreme and bizarre. By the film's end, Hara seems to ask whether the terrible nature of this buried incident is worth the violence of Okuzaki's methods. - Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE (NO SUBTITLES)



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:
  • Kenzo Okuzaki passed away in 2005, almost 20 years after the making of the film.
  • Kenzo Okuzaki also ran for public office in 1983 during the filming. His official campaign video is on Youtube here. (lovehkfilm.com)
  • “I like to make dramatic movies. I feel strongly about this, more than other directors. I love Hollywood action films, and I wanted Okuzaki to act like an action star. I want to make action documentary films.” - Kazuo Hara
  • “From my viewpoint, a documentary should explore things that people don’t want explored, bring things out of the closet, to examine why people want to hide certain things.”
  • “My outlaw complex is very strong. I don’t feel that I’m in the middle of society. I am in the lower part. Those people on the bottom disdain those people in the mainstream. A movie director from the ‘bottom’ does not make movies that portray mainstream society nicely. I make bitter films.”
  • The film started out as something quite different: a broad portrait of the war generation. It was “only after the filming of ex-Sergeant Takami Minoru [scene 11, about a half-hour into the film, which confirms that the garrison leader Koshimizu shot one of his own men] did Hara narrow his focus to the murder of Japanese soldiers by their superior officers during the New Guinea campaign.”
  • R & R: “Okuzaki was as overbearing a star as any filmmaker could find. The director recalled that his outlandish subject was always fighting with the crew: “Some of the younger staff members quit. I, too, really came to dislike Okuzaki. He was chaotic. In the film he sounds logical only because of skillful editing. The way he speaks is often incoherent.” At numerous points during the shooting, the erratic veteran withdrew from the project. In one case, he threatened to burn all the accumulated footage in Tokyo.” [...]
  • “Shortly after the filmed encounter with ex-medic Hamaguchi Masaichi, Okuzaki disclosed his intention to murder one of his former officers, hoping to convince the director to record the homicide. “I want to kill Koshimizu and I would like you to film it”, the veteran told Hara. “No movie has such a scene in it. Having you film such a scene would be my greatest present to you.” Hara discussed the issue at great length with his lawyer, his producer and other directors. The filmmaker recalled: “This was a very delicate problem. I had to decide if I should film it or not. I still have not made up my mind. One reason that I didn’t film it is that I had become really sick of Okuzaki. I might have filmed it. Human beings have dark sides, and people want to see something frightening. People want to see the evil side of people. A little bit of me says I would like to see it. I went to speak with Imamura. His opinion was really different. He told me not to do it.”” (filmofthemonthclub.blogspot.com)

Friday, August 29, 2008

THE WAR ROOM















(1993) Director:
Chris Hegedus, D.A. Pennebaker

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

A look inside the 1992 presidential race, D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hedgus' documentary The War Room explores the backstage side of national politics by examining the day-to-day operations of Bill Clinton's campaign staff. The behind-the-scenes leader of the group is James Carville, the demonstrative, charismatic campaign manager who relies on a plain-speaking manner and emotional appeals to motivate his subordinates. He is complemented by the quieter, smoother personality and photogenic looks of young press spokesman George Stephanopoulous. The filmmakers follow these two contrasting personalities from the January New Hampshire primary to Clinton's eventual victory, as they attempt to cling to an overall strategic plan while dealing with unforeseen problems and negative press, as their candidate is saddled with accusations of adultery and draft-dodging. Subplots include the rivalries between Democratic campaign staffs -- which can become amusingly petty, as when they accuse each other of tearing down campaign posters -- and the romantic relationship between Carville and Mary Matalin, chief strategist for George Bush's campaign. Co-director D.A. Pennebaker (Monterey Pop, Don't Look Back, Primary) is renowned as an innovator in the use of cinema-verite, used here to show both the mundane complications and the emotional highlights of the modern political process. - Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



PART 2
PART 3
PART 4
PART 5
PART 6
PART 7
PART 8
PART 9
PART 10

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

EAT THE DOCUMENT















(1972) Director:
Bob Dylan

Not Available on DVD. Post a comment for info on how to see the film.

SUMMARY:

Eat the Document is a rarely exhibited documentary of Bob Dylan's 1966 tour of the United Kingdom with the Hawks (later The Band). It was shot under Dylan's direction by D. A. Pennebaker, whose groundbreaking documentary Dont Look Back chronicled Dylan's 1965 British tour. The film was originally commissioned for the ABC television series Stage '66. According to Howard Sounes's biography, "Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan", after his motorbike accident in July 1966, Dylan viewed a cut of the material edited by Pennebaker and Bob Neuwirth and thought it was too similar to Dont Look Back. Dylan decided to re-edit the film himself, assisted by longtime associate Howard Alk. Dylan however, was no film maker. Pennebaker stated: "It's not something you learn parking cars in a garage. You gotta know some of the rules and he didn't know any of the rules." Dylan and Alk hacked up the footage to produce a rough cut. Their cut was eventually shown to ABC television, who promptly rejected it as incomprehensible to a mainstream audience.
The film has its moments, including some powerful live performances of Dylan's songs of the period. It was never given a theatrical release or made commercially available on video, but unauthorized bootleg copies circulate among Dylan collectors. Also circulating in various bootleg formats is a long outtake featuring a possibly alcohol- or drug-impaired Dylan in a limousine with John Lennon. As Dylan shows signs of fatigue, Lennon urges him to get a grip on himself: "Do you suffer from sore eyes, groovy forehead, or curly hair? Take Zimdon!...Come come, boy, it's only a film. Pull yourself together." Todd Haynes's film I'm Not There features a dramatization of this conversation, with Cate Blanchett as Bob Dylan.
Highlights of the film include an interview with the Manchester Free Trade Hall concert-goer who shouted "Judas!" during the second, electric half of the set; the performances with the Hawks; the scenes of Dylan and Robertson in hotel rooms throughout England playing otherwise-unreleased songs; and a piano duet with Johnny Cash. Some of the concert footage shot for Eat the Document - including the "Judas" incident in Manchester's Free Trade Hall - was used in Martin Scorsese's Dylan documentary, No Direction Home. - Wikipedia

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



PART 2
PART 3
PART 4
PART 5
PART 6

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:
  • ...after the tour concluded, Pennebaker said, Dylan's management found itself with no movie and facing an ABC deadline. So at management's request, Pennebaker edited his footage into a 45-50 minute "rough sketch" called "You Know Something Is Happening." (The title comes from a phrase in a Dylan song.) "It would be like a continuation of 'Don't Look Back'," Pennebaker said. "'Don't Look Back 2' - what happened when the electricity was turned on." But Dylan didn't like it and, with Alk, used different tour footage to construct his own anti-documentary called "Eat the Document." ABC rejected it, and both movies have been more or less forgotten. - IndieWire
  • Robbie Robertson of The Band contributed to the edit of the film along with Bob Dylan and Howard Alk.

Monday, August 25, 2008

DEMON LOVER DIARY









(1980) Director:
Joel DeMott

Not Available on DVD. Post a comment for info on how to see the film.

SUMMARY:

"In the fall of 1975, cameraman Jeff Kreines was hired to shoot a low-budget horror movie called Demon Lover for Don Jackson and Jerry Younkins, two amateur aspiring directors from Michigan who grew up on comic books and slasher flicks. Joel DeMott joined Kreines for the trip, and with her own camera set out to document this haphazard foray into B-movie film-making. The result is a simultaneously disturbing and fascinating behind-the-scenes record, entitled Demon Lover Diary. At times scarier and frequently funnier than the film being created, DeMott and Kreines’s documentary provides unflinching insight into the chaotic and occasionally violent behavior that transpired on location." - LA Film Forum

VIDEO: SCENE



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

THE CRUISE















(1998) Director:
Bennett Miller

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

A double-deck bus tour guide with the heart of an urban poet, Timothy "Speed" Levitch doles out a fascinating overview of New York City history that's nearly impossible to forget -- due mostly to his passionate asides about life, love and the pursuit of "the cruise." Denouncing the rigidity of New York's grid plan through a rambling story about a woman in "sexual slacks," Levitch reveals as much about himself as he does about the city he loves. - Netflix

VIDEO: TRAILER



VARIOUS SCENES:
Grid Plan
The Empire State Building
Divorce
Civilization
World Trade Center

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Friday, August 22, 2008

PINK FLOYD LIVE AT POMPEII















(1972) Director:
Adrian Maben

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

More Than a Movie! An Explosive Cinema Concert!

Conceived by the French director Adrian Maben as "an anti-Woodstock film," Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii was shot in October 1971 in the ancient city's vacant, 2,000-year-old amphitheatre--a venue chosen to accentuate the grandeur and spaciousness of the band's Meddle-era music.

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE (CONCERT ONLY VERSION)



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:
  • The performances of "Echoes", "A Saucerful of Secrets", and "One of These Days" were filmed from October 4, 1971 to October 7, 1971. The remaining songs were filmed in a Paris studio, along with additional front projection footage for insertion into the Pompeii performances. The sequences in Paris were filmed in late 1971/early 1972, and can be distinguished by the absence of Rick Wright's beard. This version was released in theaters in September 1972 and is also included on the DVD edition as an extra feature. In August of 1974, another version was released combining the original film with supposed recording sessions of The Dark Side of the Moon at Abbey Road Studios. These sessions were actually staged for the film, as the recording of the album had been completed when these sessions were filmed in January of 1973 and the band was mixing the album at the time.
  • The original release, running for one hour, only featured the live footage. A second version had additional footage of the band as they recorded or pretended to record their album The Dark Side of the Moon, as well as interviews conducted off-camera by Maben. This version ran for 80 minutes. The Director's Cut is a 2003 DVD re-release running 92 minutes. In addition to the concert and interview footage, it includes computer-generated images of outer space and of Pompeii as well as then-recent footage of Abbey road and the Apollo missions. The original "full screen" image has been chopped up in this version and is presented in "fake widescreen", although the original cut is presented on the DVD as an "added bonus". (NOTE: Highly recommend seeking out the 80 minute version)

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

ERROL MORRIS' FIRST PERSON















(2000) Director:
Errol Morris

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

Hailed by Roger Ebert as "one of America's strangest and most brilliant documentary filmmakers" Errol Morris brings his unrivaled talents to the small screen for a stylized series of intimate interviews with a unique and fascinating array of people. With the aid of his "Interrotron" an innovative camera device Morris invented to maintain merciless eye contact with his subjects the Oscar winning director puts his odd assortment of eclectic characters and atypical topics under the microscope to produce "revelatory whip-smart television" (Baltimore City Paper).

VIDEO: Episode 'One hell of a tale'



Other episodes:
One in a Million Trillion
Mr. Debt

Errol Morris' aborted projects:
Donald Trump discusses Citizen Kane
The True Strangeness of the Universe

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Monday, August 18, 2008

AMERICAN PIMP















(1999) Director:
Albert Hughes, Allen Hughes

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

Albert and Allen Hughes, the writing and directing team of Menace II Society and Dead Presidents, turn their documentary eye to the world of street pimps in this 1999 Sundance Film Festival Documentary Competition entry. The black urban pimps interviewed here open up to reveal their world and their secrets to the camera in a film that is not about sex, but about power. We meet pimps named Filmore Slim, C-Note, K-Red, Gorgeous Dre, and Rosebudd as they discuss their business, including percentages, lifestyles, stealing "ho's," and the Player's Ball. These men exude charm and charisma, and boast rock-star status in their communities, with expensive clothes, cars, and bankrolls. The film works as an allegory to the film and music industries, where people are lured with glamor and money, only to be used as commodity and tossed out once they have passed their prime. The film also traces the history of the street pimp from the '20s to the present, with particular emphasis on the '70s pimp, whose lifestyle was exposed in the blaxploitation films of the '70s. - Chris Gore, All Movie Guide

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:

"A brilliant, alarmingly honest portrait" - Vanity Fair
"Outrageously entertaining" - Entertainment Weekly
"Essential viewing" - Hollywood Reporter
Rotten Tomatoes reviews
Albert & Allen Hughes interviewed by Gerald Perry about AMERICAN PIMP
Other Hughes brothers films include Menace II Society, Dead Presidents, and From Hell

NOTES:
Voicemail from The Bishop Don Magic Juan
The AMERICAN PIMP Drinking Game
Quotes from AMERICAN PIMP
"Gorgeous Dre" (From Pimp to Life Coach)

Saturday, August 16, 2008

LES BLANK'S LIGHTNIN' HOPKINS DOCUMENTARIES











(1969) Director: Les Blank


DVD

SUMMARY:

The Blues Accordin' to Lightnin' Hopkins
The great Texas bluesman Lightnin' Hopkins is captured brilliantly in this deeply moving film. Blank reveals Lightnin's inspiration, and features a generous helping of classic blues. Includes performances at an outdoor barbeque and a black rodeo; and a visit to his boyhood town of Centerville, Texas. This powerful portrait is among Blank's special masterworks.

The Sun's Gonna Shine
A lyrical recreation of Lightnin' Hopkins' decision at age eight to stop chopping cotton and start singing for a living.

VIDEO:

The Blues Accordin' to Lightnin' Hopkins (
TRAILER)

The Blues Accordin' to Lightnin' Hopkins (1968)


The Sun's Gonna Shine (COMPLETE 10MIN FILM)



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Thursday, August 14, 2008

FISHING WITH JOHN













(1991) Director:
John Lurie

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

Fishing with John is a 1991 cult TV series directed by and starring actor and musician John Lurie. On the surface, the series resembles a standard travel or fishing show: In each episode, Lurie takes a famous guest on a fishing expedition. Since Lurie has no expert knowledge of fishing, the interest is in the conversations between Lurie and the guests, all of whom are friends of Lurie. Nothing particularly unusual actually happens, but the show is edited and narrated in a way to suggest that Lurie and his guest are involved in dramatic and even supernatural adventures. The deadpan, laconic style of the show is heavily influenced by the films of director Jim Jarmusch, who appears as the guest in the first episode.
Besides Jarmusch, the guests featured are actor Matt Dillon, musician Tom Waits, actor Willem Dafoe and actor-director Dennis Hopper. The series ran for 6 episodes, each featuring a different guest and locale, except for episodes 5 and 6 which both feature Hopper in Thailand. Each episode has voice-over narration by Robb Webb, which is sometimes bizarre and off-topic. The soundtrack is by Lurie.

VIDEO: EPISODE 1 WITH JIM JARMUSCH



OTHER EPISODES:
Tom Waits
Willem Dafoe
Matt Dillon
Dennis Hopper 1
Dennis Hopper 2

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:
  • Director John Lurie has lead the legendary jazz group the Lounge Lizards for twenty years and starred in the Jim Jarmusch films Stranger Than Paradise and Down By Law.
  • Scenes from the episode with Jim Jarmusch were used in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode, Hooky.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

ON THE ROAD WITH CHARLES KURALT















VHS

SUMMARY:

Charles Kuralt is best known for his critically acclaimed series of "On The Road" television "essays" on America and for his fifteen year tenure as host of the equally acclaimed CBS Sunday Morning series on CBS television. Through a CBS network career spanning thirty-seven years, this award winning journalist and author has brought the life and vitality of back roads America to an eager audience while providing a television home for the arts, the environment and the offbeat.

Anything from unusual hobbyists to unusual families to the simple pleasures of unknown places was considered worthy of Kuralt's attention, and part of "On the Road"'s appeal may also have been that Kuralt was never known to have set a specific itinerary for himself. No matter whatever else he did for CBS — hosting CBS News Sunday Morning program from 1979 to 1994, contributing to other CBS News projects — "On the Road" became Kuralt's legacy. His features often captured the beauty of the American countryside, sometimes using images and sounds with no voice-overs to effectively capture the scene.

VIDEO: Tom Sawyer Days In Hannibal (From On The Road series)



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Sunday, August 10, 2008

OLYMPIA














(1938) Director:
Leni Riefenstahl

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

(Olympia) was the first documentary film on the Olympic Games ever made. Many advanced motion picture techniques, which later became industry standards but which were groundbreaking at the time, were employed, including unusual camera angles, smash-cut editing techniques, extreme close-ups, setting the railway tracks on the stadium to shoot the crowd and the like. The techniques employed are almost universally admired, but the film is controversial due to its political content. Nevertheless, the film appears on many lists of the greatest films of all-time, including Time Magazine's "All-Time 100 Movies."

Produced at the behest of the International Olympics Committee (IOC), Leni Riefenstahl's film of the 11th Olympic Games which took place in Berlin from August 1st to August 16th, 1936, has won numerous awards and is widely considered by film critics to be the greatest sports documentary ever made, also often included in critics' lists of the top 100 films (of any genre) of the 20th century. Although usually referred to alongside Triumph des Willens (Triumph of the Will) as a "Nazi propaganda" film made for Hitler, it was in fact commissioned by the International Olympics Committee, and with its multi-national themes and its celebrations of the athletic successes of peoples from all nations and all races, it could easily be argued that this is, indeed, perhaps the greatest anti-Nazi propaganda film ever made.

VIDEO:
FULL FEATURE



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Thursday, August 7, 2008

TOKYO OLYMPIAD














(1965) Director:
Kon Ichikawa

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

Tokyo Olympiad is a 1965 documentary film directed by Kon Ichikawa which documents the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Like Leni Riefenstahl's 'Olympia', which documented the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Ichikawa's film was considered a milestone in documentary filmmaking. However, Tokyo Olympiad keeps its focus more on the atmosphere of the games and the human side of the athletes instead of concentrating only on the winners and the results.

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



Remainder of film can be found on youtube

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:

NOTES:

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

THE STAIRCASE















(2004) Director:
Jean-Xavier de Lestrade

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

A critical triumph across the board, Sundance Channel presents THE STAIRCASE, an edge-of-your-seat, real-life thriller from Academy Award®-winning documentary filmmaker Jean-Xavier de Lestrade ("Murder on a Sunday Morning"). With all the trappings of a classic murder mystery, THE STAIRCASE chronicles the sensational story of North Carolina author Michael Peterson, who stood trial in 2003 for the murder of his wife, Kathleen Peterson. Granted unusual access to Peterson's lawyers and his immediate family, de Lestrade presents a gripping, inside look at the high-profile murder trial in this acclaimed 8-part series that will leave you gasping for breath.

VIDEO: 5 MINUTE PREVIEWS OF EACH EPISODE



Episode 2
Episode 3
Episode 4
Episode 5
Episode 6
Episode 7
Episode 8

REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:

Monday, August 4, 2008

THELONIOUS MONK: STRAIGHT, NO CHASER
















(1988) Director:
Charlotte Zwerin

DVD
NETFLIX

SUMMARY:

A documentary film about the life of pianist and jazz great Thelonious Monk. Features live performances by Monk and his band, and interviews with friends and family about the offbeat genius.

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:

Roger Ebert review

NOTES:
  • Excerpts from New York Times article about director Charlotte Zwerin:

Ms. Zwerin worked for many years with David and Albert Maysles, early practitioners of the documentary genre known as cinéma vérité, which uses a small camera to capture the drama of daily experience. Her editing for them was of such quality that they gave her credit as the third director of well-known films like ''Gimme Shelter'' (1970), an account of the Rolling Stones' 1969 tour of the United States.

It was her decision to include the band members' reactions to the killing of a fan on the stage of a concert at the Altamont Speedway in Livermore, Calif., the site of the tour's last concert.

''The real hero of the making of the film was Charlotte Zwerin, who edited it and got a directing credit,'' Stephen Lighthill, a cameraman, said in an interview with Salon.com. ''I was stunned with what she got out of my footage. She compressed it and gave you a sense of a buildup of tragedy that you otherwise wouldn't have.''

Other films she did with the Maysleses included ''Salesman'' (1969), an account of four real-life sales representatives of the American Bible Company, and ''Running Fence'' (1978), a chronicle of the successful efforts of the artist Christo and his wife, Jeanne-Claude, to erect a 24-mile fabric fence in the California hills.

Her own films included ''Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser'' (1989), which contained rarely seen clips of the brilliant and eccentric jazz pianist; ''Arshile Gorky'' (1982), a profile of the abstract painter; ''Sculpture of Spaces: Noguchi'' (1995); ''American Masters -- Ella Fitzgerald: Something to Live For'' (1999), a biography narrated by Tony Bennett; and ''Toru Takemitsu: Music for the Movies'' (1994), an examination of the Japanese composer. The Museum of Modern Art had a retrospective of her works last year.

....

She attended Wayne State University, where she established a film society before moving to New York and finding work as a librarian at CBS for its documentary series ''The 20th Century.'' She slowly worked her way up to editor, then joined Drew Associates, where Robert Drew was pioneering ''direct cinema,'' as cinéma vérité was also called. She met the Maysleses at Drew.

She told The Times she stopped working with the Maysleses because they would not let her produce. ''They cast an awful long shadow, and it came time for me to get out of it,'' she said.

On her own films she became known for a personal signature characterized by innovative editing. Leonard Feather, a critic for The Los Angeles Times, said that her film on Monk provided ''a closer glance behind the veil of this half-hidden, exotically gifted figure than could ever be observed during his sadly aborted career.''

Saturday, August 2, 2008

MAKING THE SHINING















(1980) Director:
Vivian Kubrick

DVD
Netflix

SUMMARY:

Stanley Kubrick allowed his then-17-year-old daughter, Vivian, to make a documentary about the production of The Shining. Created originally for the BBC television show Arena, this documentary offers rare insight into the shooting process of a Kubrick film.

VIDEO: FULL FEATURE



Film with Director commentary

Other documentaries about Stanley Kubrick:
REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, CREDITS:
NOTES:
  • Vivian Kubrick wrote the score to Full Metal Jacket using the pseudonym, Abigail Mead. Abigail Mead was based on the name of the house where the Kubricks lived between 1965 to 1979, Abbott's Mead, located near to MGM's Borehamwood studio.