martha...martha
trouble every day
sleepy time gal
the piano teacher
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MARTHA...MARTHA
Sandrine Veysset, France, 2001; 97m
Revisiting the fertile terrain of provincial working-class miserablism
first explored in her haunting debut, Will It Snow for Christmas?,
Sandrine Veysset confirms her status as a major talent with an
uncompromisingly bleak vision. A highlight of last year's Cannes
Directors' Fortnight, this harrowing film, haunted by the specters of
mental illness, trauma, and infanticide, depicts the downward spiral of
a woman living just above poverty level with her husband and little
girl. Valérie Donzelli gives a no-holds-barred performance as Martha, a
woman who's her own worst enemy.
Fri Feb 15: 2; Sat Feb 16: 6; Sun Feb 17: 4
THE MISSION
Johnnie To, Hong Kong, 1999; 81m
There's a strong feeling of gamesmanship in To's thrillers, and it finds
full expression in this revisionist genre film - an action movie that is
essentially motionless, and that emphasizes in-depth characterization
alongside crowd-pleasing setpieces. The plot deals with a group of
bodyguards hired to protect a Triad godfather whose life is threatened
by an internecine conspiracy. In its central setpiece is a stunning
sequence inside a shopping mall as it closes down for the night,
building an atmosphere of airy suspense. A cerebral action film that is
as fine as -and by virtue of its purity of "stillness in action" perhaps
even surpasses - anything from Jean-Pierre Melville or John Woo.
- Stephen Teo, "Hong Kong Journal," FILM COMMENT, Nov-Dec 2000
Fri Feb 15: 4:15; Sun Feb 17: 6:15; Wed Feb 20: 6:15; Thurs Feb 21: 3:30
INVESTIGATING SEX
Alan Rudolph, USA, 2001; 107m
In the late 1920s a group of Surrealist artists and thinkers (including
Dermot Mulroney, Alan Cumming, and Jeremy Davies) assemble in the
mansion of a crackpot tycoon (Nick Nolte) to compile an objective and
clinical study of male sexuality, their sessions recorded by two female
stenographers (Neve Campbell and Robin Tunney). The action is loosely
inspired by the "Surrealist Research" surveys conducted by André Breton,
and along with The Moderns and Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, this
makes a trilogy of Alan Rudolph films about intellectual groups of the
20s. But this being a Rudolph movie, the clinical survey soon gives way
to the director's specialty: bumpy, messy romance, buoyed by Rudolph's
trademark giddily crafted dialogue, with rapid-fire exchanges that
approach screwball comedy. One of the most enjoyable movies of the year
and still seeking distribution. - Robert Horton, "Distributor Wanted,"
FILM COMMENT, Nov-Dec 2001 NOTE: The Friday Feb. 15 performance (only) is SOLD OUT; there will be a standby line.
Fri Feb 15: 6:15; Sat Feb 16: 1:30
Wed Feb 20: 4
TROUBLE EVERY DAY
Claire Denis, France, 2001; 100m
The director of Beau travail returns with a unique contemporary take on
the vampire film that's guaranteed to polarize audiences. Vincent Gallo
and Tricia Vessey are American honeymooners in Paris. Spending his time
searching for an old colleague, he is neglecting his new bride. It turns
out that Dr. Semeneau is living in obscurity to protect his wife
(Béatrice Dalle), who, despite being kept under lock and key by her
husband (Alex Déscas), keeps slipping away to indulge an unhealthy
appetite. Pushing the sexual dimension of the vampire myth to truly
harrowing levels, Denis's film is a model of unsettling atmosphere,
slow, deliberate buildup and narrative economy. NOTE: This performance is SOLD OUT; there will be a standby line.
Fri Feb 15: 8:45
SLEEPY TIME GAL
Christopher Münch, U.S., 2001; 94m
Frances (Jacqueline Bisset, in a very moving performance), who's dying
of cancer, suddenly feels the need to see the baby girl she gave up for
adoption long ago. Rebecca (Martha Plimpton), a grown woman with an Ivy
League affect and a sharp business sense that she wears like a shell,
leaves New York to visit her adoptive parents in Boston and then travels
to Baton Rouge to preside over the acquisition of a small radio station.
Bob (Seymour Cassel) wants to make himself whole by reuniting with
Frances, his former lover, reincorporating himself into her life.
Filmmaker Christopher Münch lets his three principal characters slowly
achieve a painful insight: the past never dies, but it's also never to
be repeated.
Sat Feb 16: 3:45; Sun Feb 17: 2;
Mon Feb 18: 6:15
THE PIANO TEACHER
Michael Haneke, France/Austria, 2001; 130m
Based on the novel by Elfriede Jelinek and set in contemporary Vienna,
THE PIANO TEACHER tells a harrowing story of sex, fascism, and the ties
that bind and sometimes throttle. Isabelle Huppert plays the title
character, a frustrated fortysomething musician who still lives with her
mother and becomes involved with a cocky young piano student. Deviant
sexuality is the order of the day as Erika debases herself in porno
emporiums and casual sex encounters. It's a spot-on vision of female
masochism that proceeds to address larger ideas of societal cruelty.
Huppert's stunning performance won the best actress award at the 54th
Cannes Film Festival. NOTE: This performance is SOLD OUT; there will be a standby line.
Sat Feb 16: 8:15
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