Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Guide: Preview: Film

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Guide: Preview: Film

    The Guide: Preview: Film

    The Guardian - United Kingdom; Jul 16, 2005

    PHELIM O'NEILL


    * Optronica LONDON

    How can you not attend something with a name as cool as Optronica?
    Just try dropping it into conversation and see how impressed and
    confused your friends will be. It means a cutting-edge fusion of
    music and visuals and judging from these events, it seems to warrant
    the creation of such a fancy-pants new term. The IMAX theatre plays
    host to live sets from DJ Spooky (pictured, who'll be soundtracking
    DW Griffith's reprehensible, Klan-friendly classic Birth Of A
    Nation), Plaid and ex-Kraftwerker Karl Bartos, all making splendid
    use of the largest screen in Britain. At the NFT there are
    audio-visual performances from Skoltz Kolgen, People Like Us and
    Masakatsu Takagi, plus a free outdoor screening this Friday, and
    dozens of other events. So that's what an Optronica is, then.

    IMAX, National Film Theatre, SE1 and The Spitz, E1, Wed 20 to Jul 24

    Sergei Parajanov LONDON

    Georgian/Armenian Sergei Parajanov was arrested twice by the KGB on
    trumped-up charges, but it wasn't just the law whose attention he
    drew - his remarkable, allegorical films are still pored over today.
    His masterpiece is the symbolic, dreamlike The Colour Of Pomegranates
    (pictured), which is presented here in a director's cut. Sumptuous
    images flow into one another in a highly pleasing manner - although
    it had a different effect on the Soviet authorities who practically
    buried the film for almost a decade. His other inimitable works, The
    Legend Of The Suram Fortress, Shadows Of Our Forgotten Ancestors and
    Ashik Kerib are also playing, and all screenings will be introduced
    by his nephew Georgy Parajanov, who also unveils his documentary on
    his late uncle, I Died In Childhood. po'n

    Cine Lumiere, SW7,

    Tue 19 to Thu 21

    Experimenta LONDON & TOURING

    This is a chance to get up to speed on the state of experimental
    film, and also to put it into some perspective with some great
    archive material. There's a section on the final works of arch
    avant-gardist Stan Brakhage - including Water For Maya and The God Of
    Day Had Gone Down Upon Him - which saw him try new approaches without
    diminishing his unique vision. New works from Robert Breer and Peter
    Kubelka are placed alongside offerings from younger upstarts like the
    woozy abstractions of Yuiko Matsumaya and the found footage of Julie
    Murray. Jessica Yu's excellent outsider art documentary, In The
    Realms Of The Unreal, also starts a short run. The programme, or
    parts of it, will be touring most UK cities between now and
    September. po'n

    ICA Cinema SE1, Sat 16 to Jul 24, www.bfi.org.uk/ experimenta

    * Studio Ghibli NATIONWIDE

    Live-action studios don't really generate much trust and loyalty -
    when was the last time you went to see a movie just because it was
    made by Warner or Universal? But it's different for animation houses.
    Generally they're built around one visionary who influences and
    inspires all the output, delivering a more consistent product. With
    Japan's Studio Ghibli it's the phenomenally creative Hayao Miyazaki,
    and with his latest, Howl's Moving Castle, due for release, this is a
    great chance to get up to speed with their imaginative output.
    Miyazaki's films make up most of the bill: the critic-proof Spirited
    Away, the breakthrough Princess Mononoke, as well as the lesser-known
    examples Kiki's Delivery Service (pictured) and Castle In The Sky.
    Plus a couple of films with which he's had heavy involvement: moving
    teen drama Whisper Of The Heart and the wonderfully baffling The Cat
    Returns. po'n

    Picturehouse Cinemas, Wed 20 to Sep 25
Working...
X