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Posts tagged with "non-fiction"

The Sugar Curtain

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We're delighted to be opening The Sugar Curtain. This subtle and stirringly ambivalent film ponders the promises and boycotts of the Cuban Revolution, from a decidedly singular perspective. Cuban Socialism may have quite literally saved the life of filmmaker Camila Guzman Urzua. Ms. Guzman Urzua's father, Patricio Guzman, had been a filmmaker closely aligned with deposed Chilean President Salvator Allende; not long after the coup, as Augusto Pinochet's junta ideologically cleansed Chile, Guzman and family made their way to Cuba.

With this background, one might expect Ms. Guzman Urzua to present an extremely positive image of Castro's Cuba. She doesn't. Instead, the film is ambivalent, contrasting Castro's Socialist Dream with that dream's incarnation - particularly with the day-to-day reality of contemporaries who grew up in the 70s and 80s. Though some remain, many - including the director herself - now live elsewhere.

From Ms. Guzman Urzua's frank and personal meetings with these old friends, a subtle and relatively unique image of Cuba appears. The Sugar Curtain is less an ideological talking point for a CNN roundtable than a serious chat among old friends. Thirty years into their lives, they ask: what happened between us? Were we told truths or lies, and, now, are those lies excusable, even if they hurt us? And what about the truths?

Ed Gonzalez puts it well in the Village Voice:

"Both love story and memory of underdevelopment, The Sugar Curtain illuminates, with great sobriety and reverence, the paradox of a nation as steeped in tradition as it is in hypocrisy . . . Guzmán Urzúa understands that to be Cuban is to be conflicted."


The reviews have generally been positive, and for that of course I am grateful. But one critical oversight is remarkable. No one whom I have read discusses The Sugar Curtain within the context of Patricio Guzman's work. The senior Guzman has, for over thirty years, documented Pinochet's coup and dictatorship, while simultaneously evoking the memory of Salvador Allende with an endless tone of "what if?" What if there had been no U.S.-backed coup? What if Allende had remained President of Chile? What if the Guzman family had stayed in Chile? At a remove, and certainly through metaphor, The Sugar Curtain feels like Ms. Guzman Urzua's response to such conjecture. If there had been no coup, if Allende had remained, and if the Guzman family had stayed in Chile, then maybe their Chile would have resembled the Cuba depicted here.

Would that have been a good thing?

Go to the Pioneer Theater website.

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As a footnote, we're excited about some of the people with whom we're presenting the film. Jonathan Miller of First Run / Icarus Films has brought Patricio Guzman's work to the United States for a long time. Gary Crowdus, of Cineaste magazine and now also working with First Run Icarus Films, has chronicled Cuban and Chilean cinema since about the time Ms. Guzman was born. Crowdus is one of the great, unknown American film critics. Beyond being a fantastic writer and editor, Crowdus consistently sticks to his principles and obsessively delivers fantastic work. We're delighted to present this film with his collaboration, and also with that of Mr. Miller, everyone else at First Run / Icarus Films, and finally our old friends at Cinema Tropical.

"The Mormon Church Explains It All to You" - at last

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The seriously odd program of classic educational shorts produced by the Church of Latter-Day Saints, finally screens this weekend after being cancelled due to last year's transit strike! Presented by fabled film collector Dennis Nyback.

This Sunday, June 11, 7pm

Man's Search for Happiness 1964
"Made for the NY World's Fair. Directed by Wetzel O Whitaker. Just about everything you need to know about Mormonism."

Cipher in the Snow 1973
"Directed by Keith J. Atkinson, protege of Wetzel O Whitaker. A very bleak film about a school kid who drops dead and it is found that no one at school had ever noticed him when he was alive."

The Mailbox 1977
"This film was mentioned to me by several people as the most memorable film they were ever shown in school. Directed by David Jacobs who started in Mormon films in 1962. It is a story of a old woman who is neglected by her kids."

How Do I Love Thee 1965
"Directed by Wetzel O Whitaker. I always include this in my program Dennis Nyback's Favorite Films. The story of college room mates Jan and Penny. Penny puts out for her boyfriend. Jan is saving herself for marriage."

Buy tickets in advance here.

Screening at the Pioneer Theater
East 3rd Street between Avenues A and B (closer to A)
New York, New York
www.twoboots.com/pioneer

(. . .unless God strikes this program down again)

More terrific reviews for LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH

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NEW YORK TIMES, June 1, 2006: Jeannette Catsoulis, "LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH: Indelible Portraits of Power's Absolute Corruption."

NEW YORK PRESS, May 31, 2006: Jim Knipfel, "LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH: Propaganda That Works."

TWITCHFILM, May 31, 2006: Todd Brown, "Europe's Last Dictatorship."

THE NEW YORKER, May 29, 2006: Reed Brody, "LONG KNIVES NIGHT."

NY POST, June 2, 2006: V.A. Musetto, "Say 'Da!' to Belarus Duo (LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH.)"

NY SUN, June 2, 2006: Nicolas Rapold, "An S.O.S. From A Former Soviet Republic."

THE REELER, June 2, 2006: S.T. VanAirsdale, "Screening Gotham (LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH)."

NERVE SCREENGRAB, June 1, 2006: Bilge Ebiri, "LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH." (scroll to bottom of page)

NOVOYE RUSSKOYE SLOVO, June 1, 2006: Oleg Sulkin, "LONG KNIVES NIGHT / REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH."

LONG KNIVES NIGHT + REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH rave reviews

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". . .makes FAHRENHEIT 9/11 seem tepid and weak . . .a brutal and brilliant bit of filmmaking."
- Jim Knipfel, NY PRESS (click here, then scroll down)

"Indelible portraits of power's absolute corruption. . .an astonishing diatribe. . .heaves with disturbing scenes of violence against innocent Belarussians. . .a primal howl of outrage and disgust."
- Jeannette Catsoulis, NY TIMES (link)

See also:
Todd Brown's notice on TwitchFilm.net (link)

Buy tickets now. Please.

Belarus: Europe's Last Dictatorship

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LONG KNIVES NIGHT and REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH are almost certainly the most important films the Pioneer will show in 2006. They may be the most important films the Pioneer has ever scheduled.

Recently, you have read and seen coverage of the “election” in Belarus. You have heard that the election's aftermath pits Russia against the West: Russia has endorsed Alexander Lukashenko's return for a third term, while a rather unified West, including both the European Union and the United States, have called it fraud.

You have also heard of rebellion, hunger strikes, and protesters jailed for “hooliganism.”


But who is this Alexander Lukashenko?

Why is he called “the last dictator in Europe?”(1)

What on earth has he done?

With fury and agony, LONG KNIVES NIGHT and REPORTING FROM A RABBIT HUTCH approach these questions. Writer / director Victor Dashuk has risked imprisonment and abuse – common for dissidents, as you will see in the films – to depict and attack Lukashenko's rise to authority. The films are raw, vicious, and totally one-sided: there is not a frame of sympathy for Lukashenko in these films. Dashuk is outrageously cynical, attacking Lukashenko himself, but also comparing Belarussians' prostrations before authoritarian leaders with Satanists' prostrations before their dark master.

You could easily blow off these movies. We're showing them in the wrong format (one was made on celluloid, but we're projecting both from a rather low quality video master smuggled out of Minsk). They're not a single feature, but rather two films of odd length – though the latter is a sequel to the former, and, combined, they are loosely feature length. They're not brand new. They are political propaganda.

But don't blow off these movies. Chew on them, react to them, fight with them, take them seriously. The situation they depict is certainly serious enough.

Buy tickets on our front page. This is a very limited run. June 1-7, 9pm only.

And please, help spread the word. We've got nothing going for this, except for the films' importance.

VILLAGE VOICE review, by Mike Atkinson
NEW YORKER review, by Reed Brody (scroll down)

(1)
This is a common phrase. A few recent usages include the March 5, 2006 editorial from the INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE; and the article “The EU and America put sanctions on Belarus's leaders,” THE ECONOMIST, March 24.

These films shown by the Pioneer on versions smuggled out of Belarus.

Presented with thanks to Zoya Rozin.

Audio clip from Lawrence Lessig at the Pioneer

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Attention Supergeeks: Lawrence Lessig coming to the Pioneer

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The Pioneer continues its quest to be the geekiest movie theater on earth with next week's ALTERNATIVE FREEDOM, a sexy documentary about the free culture movement and open source software. It stars hot middle-aged men Lawrence Lessig and Richard Stallman. Though it also stars DJ Danger Mouse, the man behind the "Gray Album" which fused the Beatles' White Album with Jay-Zee's Black Album.


And, yes, Lawrence Lessig himself will be in the house, for the 9pm show next Saturday the 29th. Ladies, please, don't throw your underwear.

Seriously, though, the free culture movement is really important.

Yes, we're charging a price for tickets.

Check it out.

Back-handed compliments

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The critics are unanimous with their back-handed compliments for BLACKBALLED: THE BOBBY DUKES STORY!

"Moderately amusing."
- NY SUN

"The performances are surprisingly good."
- TV GUIDE

"Loose, scruffy charm"
- NY TIMES

"That the film appears to have been made for roughly the same price as a New York City dinner for two greatly enhances its off-beat charm."
- WASHINGTON SQUARE NEWS

Playing paintball while America burns

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"These comedy things are just not for me," a film critic recently wrote me. I had pitched him to cover our "Comedy Fortnight," a two-week extravaganza of hilarity kicking off tonight. I feel this is a strong and nuanced program. That is why I had pitched him. I figured he might see some value in the program, given his analytical skills for films proper as well as their surrounding contexts. True, he doesn't write about comedy much, and recently he has become ever more harsh and alarmist in his diagnoses of the world of cinema.

His harshness and alarm are appropriate. The grand political situation seems at least as bad, if not much worse, as it was under Nixon. Socio-economically, we are headed back past the era of Warren G. Harding, toward a new robber baron-based Gilded Age. Meanwhile, the dark shadows of media-consolidation and xenophobic paranoia pour over the land like a poisonous mist, transforming our perception through a newspeak that equates torture with freedom and democracy with occupation. (Or "independent film" with movies produced by major studios and monopolistic cable television concerns.)

So how on earth can I rationalize showing an absurd improvised mockumentary about paintball? Honestly, I don't know that I can. Do I mention something about relief? Escapism? Balance?

Politically, socially, BLACKBALLED: THE BOBBY DUKES STORY is indefensible.

But the movie's pretty damn funny.

And so are a lot of the other programs in our Comedy Fortnight.

doom spreads nothing is funny i crack up

The Comedy Fortnight program is here.

Andrew W.K. speaks!

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Hi. This is Andrew W.K. On Sunday night, February the 5th, at 11PM, I will be showing my new live-concert movie, "Who Knows?", at The Pioneer Theater. The manager, Ray, was kind enough to let me share my thoughts about the upcoming night. Firstly, it's been nothing but a pleasure to work with each and every person who made this film screening possible. That includes everyone who came to the concerts, danced like a dancer, and stood on ground. I will also stand on ground, and I will sit in chair and watch movie. On Sunday night, I'm not going to do anything except watch movie, in chair. In fact, I'm not going to watch it, I'm going to see it. This Sunday night, I'm going to be in theater, at 11PM, and I'm going to see movie, on screen, sitting in chair. Anything more than that is going to be up to the other people in chair and the other people on screen. But each one of these other people, both on screen and in chair, will also be in theater with me, this Sunday night, seeing movie. So... please come down, put yourself in chair, so we can see each other there.

Your friend,

Andrew W.K.

Buy tickets for Sunday

Andrew W.K.'s website
November 2009
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