Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Guelph Movie Club: Extended Summer Edition


We’ve reached the dreaded ‘mid-August’ – that time of the year when our thoughts drift toward the inevitable end of vacation, return to school, and turtlenecks (ugh, right?). But, I say no. Summer’s not over til we say it’s over.

In that spirit, the September edition of Guelph Movie Club is a thumb in the nose of fall AND winter. Forget you cold weather. You can have our warm weather when you pry it from our cold, sunburnt fingers.

So help us pick a classic summer movie to keep us warm through the cold winter nights using the poll below. (Note that you can only vote once. After that, the poll won't appear when you view this blog.)

This is the return of Guelph Movie Club after a long hiatus. I hope many of you will join us (or come back to the fold after summer break). We’ve got some fun things in mind for this year’s slate of movies so please come out, buy a soda and a popcorn, and watch a great movie with your fellow movie lovers.

'Til then, see you at the movies!

Danny
 

Which Movie Will Keep Summer Alive in September?

Monday, August 11, 2014

PRIMER: NABUCCO



Nabucco was only Verdi's third opera, but became one of his biggest, most lasting successes. It seems he was pressed to consider the subject by Merelli, the Scala's director circa 1840. Various stories about the opera became legend, especially the one that Verdi convinced himself to compose the music when he accidentally saw the words to the Chorus of Hebrew Slaves fall open in the libretto he was given. It now seems more likely that enthusiasm for this chorus was generated by the audience reaction when they saw the metaphoric link between their suppressed national identity under the Austrian Hapsburg rule, and the subjugated Hebrews under the foreign domination of the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar their king portrayed onstage. The king's name is shortened to Nabucco to make it more wieldly.

Leo Nucci as Nabucco
King Nabucco, has two daughters: Abigaile, the star soprano, and Fenena, an alto part. At war with the Babylonians, the Jews have captured Fenena, who had fallen in love with the nephew of the Jewish king, Ismaele—the tenor. Nabucco, with Abigaile and some disguised soldiers, stealthily enters the Temple at Jerusalem. When Fenena admits her love for Ismaele, the Babylonians destroy the Temple. And since this affair between Ismaele and Fenena has allowed this destruction, the Jewish high priest Zaccharia curses Ismaele as a traitor.

In Act 2, at Babylon, Nabucco puts Fenena in charge of the Hebrews as Abigaile finds evidence that she is of slave birth and bewails the fact Nabucco has kept her out of the fighting. The High Priest of Baal tells Abigaile that Fenena has released the Hebrew prisoners, and that he wants her to rule Babylon, spreading the lie that Nabucco has been killed. Abigaile sings of her own ambition to rule. Zaccharia, now captive in Babylon, discovers Fenena's conversion to Judaism, and prevents reprisals of the Jews against Ismaile. 

Abdallo, a solider, announces Nabucco's death and Abigaile's plans to seize power. As Abigaile enters and demands the Babylonian crown from Fenena, Nabucco appears and declares himself not only king, but god. Fenena sides within the Jews, which incenses her father further. In a crash of thunder he is punished for his hubris and is driven mad and Abigaile seizes the crown.

Liudmyla Monastyrska as Abigaille
In Act 3, the now raving Nabucco sees Fenena consigned to death, and prays to Jehovah to save his only daughter, whose death warrant he has been tricked by Abigaile to sign. He challenges Abigaile with being only a slave, but Abigaile has the only corroborating document and destroys it. Nabucco is helpless to save Fenena. Abigaile is unrelenting. The famous scene follows with the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves. Zaccharia consoles them that Yahweh will help them.

In the final Act, Nabucco is still mad, but promises to follow the Jewish god if Fenena is to be saved somehow. He will restore the Jewish temple and convert to Judaism. He is miraculously restored, and freed by Abdallo, and plans to go to save Fenena. Nabucco discovers his daughter preparing to die, but he rushes in to save her and then orders the destruction of Baal, which is preempted when the idol shatters. Nabucco frees the Israelites, and Zaccharias hails Nabucco as true king and divine servant of Jehovah. Abigaile enters in remorse. She has poisoned herself and begs forgiveness of Fenena, begs for divine mercy and dies.

I suspect Verdi had his initial difficulties with the complex plot because the dramatic developments, especially later in the piece, show the actions of the deity in miraculous events, such as the restoration of Nabucco's sanity—if not already in its being removed in the first place—and the destruction of the idol of Baal at the end of the opera. In few other places in Verdi do we see the direct influence of any active deity like this. The gods, or God, is mostly a mute figure, passionately addressed or prayed to, but is never elsewhere represented as being responsive, except in ironic plot twists, that rather serve to undermine any assurance that there is a god there. Verdi was himself a religious skeptic, but obscured this mind-set from his public for obvious reasons.

There are few pieces of music so enmeshed with a national political movement vying for the formation of a nation as this opera. The Risorgimento, the movement to establish Italy as a sovereign nation, eventually took up the chorus of Hebrew Slaves as its official anthem, and the opera was made especially famous throughout the years during which Italy achieved its nationhood.

As usual, personal passion is inextricably tied up with politics and public life in a mixture that is to become ever more familiar in Verdi's operas.

The production on show here has already garnered much attention and praise since its premiere to simultaneous worldwide cinema presentation in the debut season of this format in April 2013. Although it is still an early work, the politico-historical significance of this piece has always served it to remain relatively current in opera productions since its debut.

Michael Doleschell keeps mostly to non-fiction, and is deeply devoted to music and culture and never tires of history, and is fascinated by science and the scientific method [as long as they are well explained]. He broadcasts a program of Classical Music for 3 hours every Saturday afternoon from noon till 3 on the U of G's Radio Station: CFRU. 

Monday, August 4, 2014

REVIEW: A MOST WANTED MAN


John le Carré’s novels have proven to be successful frameworks for film adaptations throughout his entire career, dating back to 1965’s The Spy Who Came in from the Cold up to the most recent A Most Wanted Man starring Philip Seymour Hoffman. Perhaps it is le Carré’s densely complicated and nuanced plots that make his stories seem somehow more true to life than the Bournes or the Bonds (and especially the Ryans and Reachers). What le Carré’s writing lacks in explosions and car chases, he more than makes up for with sophisticated, multilayered characters embroiled in puzzles of espionage. Whereas Jason Bourne is able to single-handedly foil the intelligence agencies of the entire western world, le Carré’s characters produce the same amount of tension that any good spy story will evoke, without firing a shot.

In the hands of director Anton Corbijn (The American), le Carré’s intelligent prose and character complexity is not compromised in this film adaptation. In his last role before his untimely death, Hoffman is a perfect le Carré spy, smoking and drinking too much, out of shape, disgruntled. Against the backdrop of post-9/11 paranoia he plays Günter Bachman, the head of an anti-terror team in Hamburg with the right dose of political cynicism that cuts through the fantasy that righteousness trumps ideology. Everyone has a past they don’t care to mention, an agenda they don’t wish to expose, so while he diligently tracks suspected Chechen Jihadist Issa Karpov in hopes that Karpov can expose an even greater threat, he remains suspicious of those around him claiming to be on the same side. The Americans have an interest in Dr. Faisal Abdullah, a wealthy philanthropist suspected of backing terrorist cells, while the Germans want Karpov interrogated. Human rights lawyer Annabel Richter (Rachel McAdams) wants to protect Karpov as he claims he was tortured in Russia and fears being deported. When Karpov decides to donate millions in inheritance to Abdullah, all parties stories begin to weave together. The result is not a game of cat and mouse that characterizes a usual Hollywood spy-thriller, but rather a game of dangling the bait to see who can catch the biggest fish.

The most refreshing aspect of a le Carré novel and, in this case, movie adaptation, is this deviation from the typical action packed spy-thriller. A Most Wanted Man is a slow burner. It requires patience, and an interest in geopolitics doesn’t hurt. But with that comes a more sophisticated type of storytelling, where complexity sits in place of linear plot lines, where moral questioning replaces the idea that good always triumphs, and where main characters live lives of desperation and paranoia, rather than possessing super human strength and foresight. A Most Wanted Man is as covert and impenetrable as the war on terrorism itself. The winners and losers are hard to define, and good and evil are a merely a matter of perspective.

- Bruno Mancini

Sunday, July 27, 2014

BOYHOOD: 12 YEARS LATER

We're all bracing ourselves for Boyhood around here. Everyone around the Bookshelf are huge fans of Linklater's classic 2005 remake of Bad News Bears, and we're sure Boyhood will be just as zany and heartfelt, even without Billy Bob Thornton.

Just kidding. About BNB, not about our anticipation for Richard Linklater's 12-years-in-the-making ode to childhood.

We're thrilled to announce that before the movie officially begins its first run on Friday August 15th, at 8:15pm, we're able to offer up a SNEAK PEAK on Thursday August 7th, at 7:30pm.

Everyone else seems super pumped for this landmark project as well. You can't throw a dart at the internet without hitting a rave review. So we'll throw one for you. Have a look at this New York Times Magazine piece, and take a scroll through twelve years of star Ellar Coltrane's portraits, taken by Matt Lankes.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

PRIMER: DON GIOVANNI



Mozart wrote Don Giovanni for Prague in 1787. There had been a local tradition in that city of operas and ballets dealing with the subject of the legendary seducer. The text Mozart used was by Lorenzo da Ponte, in it he had one of the best opera libretti of its era. The other two late operas by Mozart to da Ponte’s texts were similarly excellent. These last three operas alone keep Mozart supreme in the opera world.

Seeing as these operas were produced for public showing, and were intended for the eventual discernment of the nobility and officialdom in power, it is astonishing how many vexing issues they raise about the social and cultural status quo of the times, and they could almost be seen as supporting a critique of the prevailing class structure. It is amazing that any objections were only sporadically mooted over Mozart's revolutionary or, at least, liberal tendencies.

All three of the da Ponte operas have, at their core, issues of master-servant relationships, and all three plots transpire in a world of unquestioned privilege for the noble class and the eventual abuses thus engendered.

Although Don Giovanni is almost by default labeled a 'dramma giocoso', and Mozart designated it an 'Opera buffa', its actual subject is, although Mozart refuses to take it seriously, the terminal case study of the career of a depraved psychopath who lets nothing get in the way of him and his pleasure. It is as if a serial killer like Paul Bernardo had the power and untouchability of a noble, and the constant help of a personal servant, and yet the whole discourse was set in a context of hi-jinx and comic obfuscation of the basic tragic denouement of a sinner going inexorably to his perdition in actual hellfire in the end.

Each subsequent scene of action compounds our outrage. We watch as the Don's conniving, evasive manipulations get him into ever more elaborate convulsions of intrigue and deception.

The whole action starts with a murder, the killing of the Commendatore as he attempts to protect his daughter from the Don's intrusion. This is almost thrown away, buried as it is by subsequent trivial events of attempted seduction, and mistaken identity, embarrassment and obfuscation.

By the way, all through this opera the Don never 'gets his rocks off,' and this side issue, only obliquely implied, has the Don become ever 'more horny,’ and reckless, as events transpire—since the opera seems to preserve a unity of time—following the action through one evening and night. It must have been difficult to address such a risqué subject at that time, but we become acutely aware of the immense, almost pathological, sex drive of someone who is constantly seducing and manipulating every available woman within reach. Brigid Brophy thought that the creation of Don Giovanni provided a sort of sexual catharsis for the seemingly frequently 'hard up' young Mozart.

One of the constant side themes of the opera is the mistreatment on several levels and ways by the Don of his servant Leporello. Since most of the events are cast in a sort of ironically jocund mood, we are only peripherally aware of the constant bullying that Leporello undergoes at the hands of his master. Even in the last scene of the banquet in the Don's palace where food seems to be everywhere, there is an issue over

Leporello being forced to serve the food while he must stay hungry. All the comic action of the opera has the nasty underside of showing how unfair and abusive every part of the servant's low status is.

There is special irony in the second act where Leporello disguised as the Don, is made to suffer a beating intended for his master, who always gets away unscathed and scot-free, before the redress of the horrific final denouement, with the trombones in baleful D minor, in which hell claims him.

Mozart had a thing about servitude. One of the most dramatic, and undoubtedly humiliating incidents in his life, was when he was thrown out of Prinz-Cardinal Colloredo's court for his lack of deference. They made the point of actually having the valet kick Mozart in the rear as he was physically thrown out the door. Yet Mozart had, by this point, experienced the deference of most of the crowned heads of Europe during his years of travel when he was shown off as a child virtuoso.

After this, Mozart was to remain freelance for the rest of his short career, and he never went 'into servitude' again. The distressing events we surmise but can scarcely make out from the available evidence at the end of his life: his financial trouble, possible gambling debts, exclusion from court, weakness, and terminal illness, should not have been possible if he had been able to put up with some sort of stable patronage. There were no social nets, no rights or protections in case one fell on hard times in that society at the end of the 17th Century, so one of the greatest geniuses of music got caught under the wheels of adverse events, and we do not even know where his body was buried amongst the paupers. Even the enormous success of Don Giovanni was not able to provide enough residual income to protect Mozart during that final obscure period of
his life.

Michael Doleschell keeps mostly to non-fiction, and is deeply devoted to music and culture and never tires of history, and is fascinated by science and the scientific method [as long as they are well explained]. He broadcasts a program of Classical Music for 3 hours every Saturday afternoon from noon till 3 on the U of G's Radio Station: CFRU.

Monday, May 26, 2014

JUST FOR CATS


Since its 2012 debut, curated by the Walker Art Center of Minnesota, the Internet Cat Video has played to sold out audiences around the world. Devoted to the best in cat-themed YouTube videos, Just for Cats, offers audiences a fun opportunity to join fellow feline fanatics in experiencing these cuddly cat videos in the shared space of a cinema.

Staring Lil BUB, Grumpy Cat, NONONONO cat, keyboard cat, and most internationally known pusses. The evening will also feature some local kitties. This is a special one-night-only fundraising screening for the Guelph Human Society.

TWO SCREENINGS ON THURS JUNE 17TH

7:00 VIP Gala Screening
all seats $45.00
Includes a pre-show reception from 6:00 - 7:00

9:00 General Admission Screening
all seats $17.50

For ALL TICKET SALES to this event
Please visit EVENTBRITE.CA
or call the Guelph Human Society 519-824-3091

Sunday, May 25, 2014

REARVIEW: EDWARD SCISSORHANDS




Edward Scissorhands is the only film in his career (aside from his Frankenweenie remake) that Tim Burton produced, wrote the story for, and directed. Perhaps because of this creative control and singularity of vision, it remains his best film. It's Burton at his Burtoniest, before he became overly self-conscious of his own style and the expectations thereto. Pee-Wee hinted at it, Beetlejuice pioneered it, Batman appropriated it, but Edward perfected it, solidifying Burton-esque as a new and exciting aesthetic in cinema.


Right from the opening credits, his filmic fingerprints are all over the movie. The titles slice across the screen while the camera pans steadily through a shadowy assembly line to a frighteningly epic, factory-march musical score. Burton uses this exact same opening in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Sweeney Todd.

Then there’s the darkly clad and mysterious anti-hero, the brassy and choral score, the Gothic mansion, dusty staircases, looming statues, imposing backdrops, giant cogs, small town gossip, xenophobia, isolation, cobwebs, death, cavernous set pieces, absurdist humour, miniature models of houses, anthropomorphic machinery, and, of course, a healthy dose of Depp.

But unlike much of his later work, Edward Scissorhands is not Burtony for the sake of being Burtony. It is not straining to look creepy and twisted, like all Tim Burton films apparently have to. Edward uses his Gothic aesthetic to deepen character and create contrast, and everything shown on screen enhances the telling of his story. Edward’s gargantuan mansion, perched atop the absurdly huge hill overlooking the town, is miles taller than any of the pastel bungalows below. It’s full of darkened corridors and bulbous robots, and the secluded garden, with its majestic shrub-giants, is stunningly beautiful – but the house is not there just to look cool (although, to be clear, it looks super freakin cool). The mansion is a visual representation of the isolation Edward feels from the rest of the town.

Edward Scissorhands succeeds in all aspects. Every corner of this film is meticulously crafted and elevates the whole into something more than just a good movie. This is one of those perfect storms wherein all the pieces come triumphantly together and a visionary storyteller working at the top of his game is able to express something unique, enduring, and undiluted. This is a special movie.

For starters, the acting is deceptively first-rate. Johnny Depp, with his stilted movements, solid black contact lenses, and perpetually pursed lips gives a wonderfully reserved yet touching performance. He has a difficult task in Edward, but he walks the lines between slapstick and sensitivity, human and machine, weirdo and everyman, with remarkable deftness. When I think of the vastness of Depp's range (and yes, I sometimes do), I put Edward on one end and Hunter Thompson on the other – with Ed Wood somewhere in the middle.

Dianne Wiest and Alan Arkin are both pitch-perfect as the suburban mom and dad. Here are two great actors fleshing out what could be forgettable supporting roles with performances that add humour and humanity to the film. Peggy Boggs is almost nauseatingly perky (a side effect of being an Avon lady, surely), but Wiest colours her with bouts of sudden frustration atop a calm undercurrent of motherly kindness. Arkin is terrific as the quintessential Dad, oblivious to most things save for ball games, fiscal responsibility and ethical pop-quizes. Often, in my head, I hear Bill Boggs belting out “I Saw Three Ships” as he staples sheets of fake snow to his roof in the night.

Kathy Baker does a great job as the libidinous Joyce, representing the gossipy, fickle townspeople who are desperate for, yet terrified of, change. A surprisingly bulky Anthony Michael Hall is suitably eruptive and douchey as the villainous boyfriend, Jim. And of course, in his last feature film, Vincent Price is the perfect choice for Edward's reclusive, eccentric inventor. Price is delightful in his few scenes, until his character prophetically collapses on the mansion floor, dead. Though they only worked together twice, Burton and Price pair so well together that it feels like he is somewhere to be found in all of Burton's worlds, plotting away in an old mansion somewhere just off screen.

Even Winona Ryder, in all her doe-eyed yearning, delivers a nice arc for Kim. She begins as a self-absorbed teenager who hates this grotesque stranger who has invaded her home – as no doubt a teenager would – but by the end of the film she softens to the point of loving Edward in all his oddity. Ignoring her unfortunate scenes as old Kim which bookend the film (why Burton insisted on Ryder playing that part is another of the film’s glorious mysteries) she is solid and moves believably from obnoxious to sweet to lovely.


Yet the acting doesn't necessarily leap out as being brilliant in this film, only because every other aspect is executed so well. The score is powerful and moving, another highlight in Burton’s career-long collaboration with Danny Elfman. Like the film, it oscillates between light and dark, with ethereal, choral tones, and deep, driving percussion and brass.

Despite being a bizarre fantasy, Edward contains real emotional poignancy. The inventor’s death, moments before he can complete his creation, is tragic. When Kim asks why he broke into Jim’s house when he knew she was lying to him, Edward’s response of "because you asked me to” is an exceptionally heart-wrenching moment (not to mention his classic response to Kim asking him to hold her in his arms: “…I can’t.”). But Edward is also remarkably funny. This is helped by the fact the actors never play up the humour (with the possible exception of Kathy Baker). They play the surreal, suburban concerns of their small town society with utter honesty. In the same way, after Edward uncovers his talents as a barber, the townsfolk spend the remainder of the movie sporting insanely elaborate, sculpted hair-dos, but attention is never called to it. It's up to the audience to notice and appreciate.

The pacing of the film is finely tuned. Immediately we are introduced to the bleak, muted world of the suburbs, to Peggy, to Edward's mansion, to Edward, and after only fifteen minutes he has been brought to the Boggs' home and thrust upon the town. Then we slow down and stay with Edward, seeing the town through his eyes. It's not until half an hour later that we meet young Kim, the love interest and driving force of much of the film’s subsequent action. At this point we already know Edward and are on his side. The film ramps up a tad unnaturally at the very end, to a somewhat clichéd climactic action scene between hero and villain, but the story has been so skillfully told throughout that this, presumably, can be forgiven.

The costume and set design in Edward is phenomenal and very possibly its crowning achievement. Although it was only nominated for a best makeup Oscar, it won the BAFTA for best production design in 1990 (leave it to the Brits to get it right). The production design is gorgeously eye-popping, but it somehow doesn't overshadow the film or take away from the story.

Edward showcases two worlds: the eerie setting of Edward’s mansion, and the vacuous, Easter-egg-coloured neighbourhood below. The houses are cookie cut-outs of each other, distinguishable only by the various pastel paints on the exterior. The rest of town is equally bleak and oppressive. The police cars have merely the word “POLICE” unimaginatively written on their sides, and a singular, imposing “BANK” sign in massive, dirty capitals sits atop the bank’s entrance. There seems to be no shade along the streets, no trees (though lots of shrubs), and the suburban bungalows squat low beneath an oppressively monochrome sky. Even the cars and costumes of the townsfolk follow the pastel colour palette, with lots of neon slacks and floral dresses. The living rooms are exaggeratedly large and empty, revealing the hollowness of the lives of those inside them.

Although it’s all greys and blacks and shadows, the dark world of the inventor’s mansion turns out to be far more colourful than the rest of the town, aligning the audience’s empathy with Edward, the outsider. The contrast of these two worlds beautifully displays the disconnect between him and the rest of ‘normal’ society. Despite his earnest efforts, the town is unwilling to overcome their fear of the unknown, and Edward cannot fit in. Near the end of the film he storms down the street, literally tearing apart the shackles of the conformist world (his suburban clothes and suspenders) with the power of his unique artistry (his scissorhands, in case it needs to be said).

Seven of Burton’s last nine films have been remakes (!), but despite being 25 years old next year, Edward Scissorhands remains utterly inimitable. Nor is it dated. The visual effects, made entirely with models and animatronics and painted backdrops, still hold up. And since the film is an exaggerated impression of suburbia and not a realistic recreation, it will remain timeless. I would also call it a masterpiece.


I believe Edward is Burton, infecting the dull, repetitive society of Hollywood with his ominous artwork. He transforms the uninspired landscape, leaving behind monuments to his artistic novelty. At first he is sought after and adored and emulated, until the society turns its back on him (sometime around Ed Wood, I’d say) and pretends they never loved him in the first place.

Co-story writer Caroline Thompson calls this film a fable. I guess she would know. According to her, a fable “is a story that people don't necessarily believe, but that they understand”. This is as pure a definition of fable as I’ve ever heard, and an accuarate description of the movie. Most directly Edward Scissorhands is a fable explaining where snow comes from – although the film does not address how Edward gets his scissorhands on all those mammoth blocks of ice sitting in the attic of his mansion. And nor should it.

More importantly though, Edward is a beautiful and touching fable about being different, about owning your oddity and how fitting in is not always possible, or even preferable. It’s about how the desire for being accepted and loved is often misinterpreted. And how that which makes you special, also makes you alone.

Though Benjamin Lancaster lives in Toronto, he will always have been born in Guelph. He writes mostly fiction, but will write non-fiction if his friends ask him to, or if he thinks he might get money for it.