Thursday, September 14, 2017

John Ashbery on Film

Two episodes into season Two of Jane Campion's series Top of the Lake (Sundance Channel) and I'm persuaded this is one of the finest series on television. Campion has an original vision and poetic sensibilities. I know she reads widely when preparing a script, and I wonder if the poet John Ashbery has any influence on the second season. Campion's storytelling in this new season is delightfully disjunctive; scenes paced like traditional police procedurals slam up against hilariously funny flashbacks or utterly tragic ones; there are pedantic asides that go on and on, growing stranger by the minute. The guiding hand over all of this is a craftsperson's hand, skillful and intelligent. 

It could very well be that my reaction to Ashbery's death (September 3rd) has me locating his influence  everywhere, even investing it into projects that probably never had the poet in mind. Nevertheless, Campion and Ashbery have similar sensibilities, specifically in regards to humor -- the unfamiliar becoming familiar in a surprising flash. Reading an Ashbery poem before watching an episode of Top of the Lake season Two can carry you to strange and wonderful mental ground. 

My Campion-Ashbery connection is speculative. But the connection between Ashbery and avant-garde filmmaker Guy Maddin is factual and glorious. 

Ashbery contributed dialogue and text to Maddin's Seances series, which began in 2012. You can find the trailer here: Seances

In 2015, Ashburry teamed up with Maddin for a show of collages at Tibor de Nagy Gallery. You can see some of the images here: Collages


Also in 2015, Maddin released his dreamy masterpiece The Forbidden Room. Ashbery wrote the dialogue for the "How to Take a Bath" sequence. Watch the trailer for this film and, unless I miss my guess, you'll do all that's possible to find a copy of it and also recover that Ashbery collection on your books shelf, the one you hadn't thought about in a long time, and let that strange, confident voice take you places. For my part, I'm rediscovering Your Name Here with pleasure and admiration.

Trailer for The Forbidden Room: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwKvz-wA3I0


Sunday, September 10, 2017

Twin Peaks: Some Theories

What follows is an appreciation for a great work of art and possible spoilers: 




It seems to me that, just as it is in Christianity, where God submits himself to suffer and die as a human being so that humans may recognize the presence of God, an orb of light submits itself to suffer and die in the person of Laura Palmer so that grace may be found even in the most terrible circumstances. 

The good, like Dale Cooper, are not deterred by suffering: Laura's troubles with drugs and prostitution are not sour revelations, but rather these details strengthen his impulse to aid and understand, also to shepherd the hearts of others who judge Laura's situation past those troubles to the light that gave her. 

There are many versions of this story; many iterations of Dale Cooper and Laura Palmer; each is like a palimpsest, in that older versions sometimes shine through the newer ones. And like any story meant to describe a cosmology -- Gospel or otherwise -- there are type scenes and characterizations, situations and people that are not real in a historical sense but essential components for the moods and messages of the larger tale. I think Audrey Horne wakes up to discover her part in this: In a flash of white light she realizes she's an idea, not an identity -- a supporting idea in an elaborate myth about "the little girl who lived down the lane."

That little girl (Laura) is the figure of innocence in a normal-seeming place, who is on a collision course with horrible trouble. This impact reveals images and messages from a world that watches this world, which can be glimpsed by those who possess a hospitable imagination for such things: characters like Deputy Hawk and Log Lady. And one of those messages is this: there are only a few degrees of separation between a good person and a bad one. Fortunately, the myth has a hero we can measure ourselves by: Dale Cooper.

No matter how many Dale Cooper identities there are -- the perky one, the near catatonic one, the quietly determined one at the end of the series, an aspect they share is utter compassion for Laura in whatever identity she resides -- whether a murdered teenager or middle-aged woman named Carrie in Odessa (still very much present to trouble). The connecting theme in any Cooper is hospitality for the cosmic beauty Laura Palmer represents. These two, Cooper and Laura, are the twin peaks: permanent souls like those permanent features in the landscape. They outlast aberration after aberration -- all the tricks of evil Bob -- and reveal good in unlikely places, like the hearts of the gangster Mitchum brothers. 

The one thing all these different stories about Cooper and Laura have in common is the image of the lost highway: the message that navigating a moral life is like navigating a dark highway in the wilderness; it is a long stretch of unseen circumstances where anything might happen -- stay alert!









Saturday, July 22, 2017

Blonde Bombshell of Cosmic Fright


Gunvor Nelson's 1972 film TAKE OFF is an entertaining  and unsettling avant-garde vision. Burlesque performer Ellion Ness dances a full routine to the music of Pat Gleeson. She's lit with what is probably an arc lamp and glows beautifully against a black background. Nelson employs overlapping techniques in the editing so that Ness often appears ethereally doubled.

For about eight minutes it seems the purpose of the film is to celebrate the beauty of Ness and the gestures of her craft. Perhaps, too, there is some early deconstruction work going on regarding the male gaze (that term doesn't actually get introduced into feminist theory until 1975). 

The final minute of the film is utterly strange cinema. The exaltation of natural beauty gives way to something disturbing and profound. It becomes a strobing nightmare, in which Ness disassembles herself into a torso that goes spinning into outer space.

David Lynch fans will admire this precursor to his peculiar female type: a beautiful blonde woman who signals cosmic unsettledness; the strobing combat between inscrutable forces of light and dark. 

The movie sharing service Fandor allows you to stream TAKE OFF in HD. I rate Fandor an excellent site for the discovery of avant-garde films. 

Friday, July 21, 2017

Willie Nelson and the 4th of July


Seeing Willie Nelson on 4th of July weekend is at once a glorious and provocative way to celebrate the Birthday of the U.S.A. Willie sings about wanderers, contrarians, two-timers, and lonely drinkers as though their stories are the stories of the world. Born restless, he quickly eschewed any sense of "normal American life," and what he became -- a batch of honky-tonk and hippie sensibilities in the shape of a prankish, rough-looking gypsy king -- is a revered aspect of the American character. Tax evasion and pot busts will never mar him. To love Willie is to love America -- the hybridity we cherish, and the untamedness. 

Reviews of recent shows prior to the one I saw at Starplex in Dallas lament decline; there was much worry that age had finally caught up to Willie. But he was excellent for several thousand fans at Starplex; his voice was strong and his playing beautiful. Each of the critics that found previous shows messy and odd were also quick to mention Willie's special hospitality toward his audience -- the reaching out of his music to engage our care where he cares. A Willie Nelson show has never been about mathematical accuracy or exegencies of stage craft. Willie's mode is stand, deliver, and smile. What he often delivers is a spiritual experience. His way of truth-seeking through song describes the perseverance, openness, and grace intrinsic in the created being. He carries a message and speaks for all of us. 

Photo: Willie Nelson at Starplex, July 4th weekend, 2017.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Silent Light




Carlos Reygadas' film Silent Light made the New York Times list of "The 25 Best Films of the 21st Century So Far." The list has prompted many fun and aggravating debates. But Silent Light deserves the recognition, and I'm thrilled it made the list. The opening sequence is one of the greatest in cinema.  In my book, it is preceded only by the opening of Orson Welles' Othello.

I wore an article about Reygadas' film for the Texas arts journal Glasstire. Here is an excerpt:


"Carlos Reygadas is a high-minded wild thing out of Mexico City. He’s made four feature films, and all have screened at Cannes, where they were simultaneously harangued and cheered by critics. He employs a vintage camera and lenses and a small crew. The pictures are marvelous and totally out of sync with Hollywood norms. Reygadas is like a Romantic poet of the cinema; his films suggest that a love of humankind comes through Nature. They describe a cosmogenic imagination, in that each film is like an origin story and a meditation on the infinite. The images are, by turns: beautiful, hallucinogenic, brutal, erotic, and subversively funny."


You can find the full article here: Glasstire







Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Video Art with the Canon 5D

Tropic Pictures is proud to shoot Colette Copeland's video art pieces. Her latest, titled Bearding, is shot with Canon 5D Mark iii. The location is beneath a DART rail trestle, somewhere along the White Rock Creek Trail, Dallas. In this scene, Copeland's character, The Victorian Woman, traps and shaves her frequent spoil, The Man, played by Adam George. (Lens: Canon 85mm 1.8)













Find out more about Tropic Pictures:

Monday, June 5, 2017

Joan Mitchell



My enthusiasm for color is so strong it can take over my memory.  Some of my favorite black and white films are those I once mistakenly remembered as being in color: Hiroshima, Mon AmourI Confess; The Lady from Shanghai.  This also happens to me with abstract art. Recently I was looking at Franz Kline pictures. At the same time that my sense of wonder for the art renewed, I felt anxiety moving me to self-doubt. Why had I remembered there being more color in his work? -- surely that seems absurd. 

I worried that, upon seeing Marion Cajori's film, Joan Mitchell: Portrait of an Abstract Painter, I might be in a situation again of questioning my reality. Fortunately, this was not the case. Mitchell's paintings flame out from the film in wild traceries of color. 

It is a short documentary, compared with other of Cajori's portraits -- runtime is less than an hour. Cajori is limited by Mitchell's reluctance to talk. Mitchell seems neither unfriendly nor inarticulate. Rather, there are flashes in which she possesses the hospitality and skill of a masterful storyteller. What stops Mitchell from talking is probably an irresolvable contradiction. The color in her paintings is out of spontaneous expressions: the color in her paintings is out of a complicated reflexive process invested with meditations on nature. For Mitchell, it seems truth is impossible with language. Only image will do.

It is a pleasure to watch Mitchell at work in Paris and talk about the quality of light there. She doesn't react to light intellectually, like a poet does. Her way of transposing light into jaggedly arranged strokes of color is a process language doesn't match. Her paintings suggest a preconscious authority -- the wilderness in stride. 



Image: "Ladybug" by Joan Mitchell, 1957

Monday, May 23, 2016

Sensible Crowdsourcing Alternatives

Tropic Pictures is now distributing short films. Proceeds from sales of short films will help fund two feature length films being produced this summer. 

The first short film on offer is THE MOCK DESTRUCTION OF THE WORLD.

THE MOCK DESTRUCTION OF THE WORLD has screened at some progressive festivals, including Snake Alley Festival of Film (detailed twice in MovieMaker Magazine) and the luminous Dallas Video Festival. The film checks familiarity and carves out its own spooky but funny philosophical terrain. Watch it today for a modest price. Proceeds go to funding a feature narrative that Tropic Pictures is producing this Summer. Tropic Pictures believes that making short films available commercially is a sensible alternative to crowdsourcing. Rather than ask you to bank on a feature film's potential and to wait months for any news, you can purchase a really cool short film for little money and enjoy it immediately, knowing that, at the same time, you have also contributed to ambitious and intelligent feature programming by Tropic Pictures. Click below to watch a trailer of THE MOCK DESTRUCTION OF THE WORLD. Then go ahead, pay the modest fee. Support alternative cinema!

Watch trailer and Download film at this link:
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/75063

Visit TropicPictures.com of Facebook for more details.



Monday, April 4, 2016

Making a Documentary: "As Above, So Below"


AS ABOVE, SO BELOW is the name of a recent exhibition of American fraternal society art, which included paintings, banners, ritual objects and costumes from the golden age of fraternal societies, 1850 to 1930. The exhibition was held at Webb Gallery in Waxahachie, Texas.


                                   https://vimeo.com/158129838

The exhibition was timed with the release of a book by the same name, published by University of Texas press, and written by the art historian Lynne Adele and the co-owner of Webb Gallery, Bruce Lee Webb.

Tropic Pictures, a motion picture arts company, is making a documentary centered on the historical paintings and objects exhibited at Webb Gallery, but also extending to artists and lodge members in the present day, who continue to assert the lore and iconography of secret societies into American visual culture.


                                                                     Video

Viewers will be introduced to secret societies, such as the Masons, the Odd Fellows, and the Knights of Pythias, and explore the function and meaning of fraternal objects. The film will shine a light on the esoteric knowledge and moral teachings expressed in fraternal lodges, and radiate the sense of fun that comes with discovering secret things. 

In order to finance this documentary, Tropic Pictures is releasing several videos, which will range from one to five minutes in length. These videos will feature excerpts of interviews, information about fraternal objects, and early recordings of fraternal music.

These video downloads are modestly priced and when you purchase them, the proceeds go toward the costs of finishing the film.


                                                     Video

Tropic Pictures needs to earn money to photograph distant lodge locations and visit artists and historians, that we may interview them about their ideas and studies.

Please make regular visits to the Tropic Pictures website. Go to the page AS ABOVE , SO BELOW. Videos will appear regularly.

Funding for the documentary film  AS ABOVE, SO BELOW comes from the purchase of these informative, well-produced videos. You will also find a donate button, if you wish to increase your contribution.

AS Above, So Below, the new documentary film by Tropic Pictures. Please find more information at 
www.Tropic Pictures.com.

Sunday, February 14, 2016

As Above, So Below

Filmmakers Richard Bailey (Tropic Pictures) , Paul Bryan ("Believe it Anyway"), and Mark A. Nobles ("Teen-A-Go-Go") are presently filming a documentary centered around a recent exhibition of fraternal society art titled “As Above, So Below” at Webb Gallery in Waxahachie, Texas. ( Exhibition ended February 14.) 

Like the exhibition, the documentary focuses on the “golden age” of fraternal societies, 1850-1930. These fascinating banners, costumes and ritual objects describe the symbolism and assert the iconography of secret societies such as the Masons, the Odd Fellows, and the Knights of Pythias. 

The film intends to open lodge room doors and shine a light on the esoteric knowledge and moral teachings expressed in ritual objects, and radiate the sense of fun that comes with discovering secret things.














Friday, December 4, 2015

Get Your "Southern Gothic" On For The Holidays!

For a limited time you can watch a FULL SCENE of the forthcoming Tropic Pictures film A SPIRAL WAY. The scene is a "lady of the lake" story  Warning: mature content and this scene is macabre. But the point of the macabre in folklore is to chase bad luck away. I hope you enjoy the clip and have great luck this holiday season!

Here's the link: A SPIRAL WAY

Tropic Pictures makes films with mythic emphasis, poetic language, and sharp humor. Find out more at www.TropicPictures.com.





Thursday, November 26, 2015

Rock ’n’ Roll & Somethingness: Dead White Zombies

My review of of the immersive theater piece "DP92" by Dead White Zombies has been published by Glasstire
"Let’s revel in few of the show’s details: Lots of skin showing through ripped or open clothing; tight body suits; youthful vigor in combat boots; contact and writhing; the upsetting of authority; backup singers; and one hell of an improvised guitar, the body of which is an amplifier."

To read the article, click here.




Monday, November 23, 2015

Journal of Short Film

The Journal of Short Film has selected the Tropic Pictures movie "A Well-proved Helpmate" for volume 36. It is an honor to be included in the peer reviewed journal, which is published in DVD form. 

This volume will also include works by Annie Berman, Margaret Orr, Cole Becker, Jared Katsiane, Dustin Grella, Nick and Lexie Trivundza, and Franz Ross

Click the link below to watch a short scene from "Helpmate." 

A Well-proved Helpmate: Teaser
https://vimeo.com/121637258









Monday, November 16, 2015

Metamorphosis: Robert Lansden at Cris Worley Fine Arts in Dallas

My article on Robert Lansden's "Metamorphosis" has been published by Glasstire. Click the link below for the article:

Glasstire

Robert Lansden draws small, repetitive marks that link into larger pictures that look like strange fabrics, blooms, and topographical data. Lansden bases each picture on an algorithm, and the marks are typically triangles or rectangles that the artist makes with pen, gouache, or watercolor. The rules of his algorithm make for an operation that is not wholly deterministic. That is to say, the algorithm allows for variance in the output—variance that results in the illusion of gashes, folds, peaks, and vales. (Read more.)



Friday, October 23, 2015

"The Mock Destruction of the World" Podcast

Thanks to Rob and Chad of The Clubhouse podcast for this interview at Dallas Video Festival. I had just walked out of a theater, was adjusting to the light, when I got signaled over for a talk. No time for preparation, but candor is always best. Even candor with a stammer. Taped on 10/18, my interview starts at the 1hr, 22min. mark. 

The Clubhouse, Episode 6-13
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-6-13-dallas-videofest/id674600956?i=354826958&mt=2

"The Mock Destruction of the World" played as part of The Texas Show at Dallas Video Festival. The Texas show is a juried event, and was the closing number on October 18, at Angelika Film Center in Dallas. You can find program info here: Prekindle 

Always a pleasure and a challenge to try to describe the movie. Here is what I put down for press materials"

Pictorially, "The Mock Destruction of the World" plays out like a dark and peculiar dream. I would also add, a funny dream. It is the story of an unusual toymaker, who shows his hospitality for the processes of malfunction and decay through the creation of nightmarish toys. What the toymaker says about his work is actually generous and affirmative. He believes decay is a creative process.

I've included a brief excerpt from one of the toy maker's speeches and some pictures. 

"I think the initial discomfort someone feels when they see someone disfigured . . . birth defect or severe burns . . . is they see or get a sense of the end of humanity. I mean, just a glimpse of that final image, probably not a whole thought. But that speck of doubt, it reveals just how fragile flesh and bone really is, how fragile our sense of beauty.

We see, in a sense, our own destruction. As a kindness, we might think, 'There but for the grace of ...Whatever... go I.' A way of sympathy for the afflicted that is also a term of hope that our own good luck continues.

We like to think our lives will go on and on. Hospitality for decay or blisters or some catastrophe of bone is pretty rare. We make an enemy of deformity and decay . . . an enemy of death. And so, faced with such distortions, we feel an urge to combat them."



Friday, October 2, 2015

Occiput: Lucia Simek at the Reading Room

My article on Lucia Simek's two channel video "Occiput" has been published by Glasstire.

The sense of inevitability in highway driving that Simek evokes through editing is occasionally cracked open by surprises. Click the link below for full article.





Link: