Archive for the ‘Film’ Category

Christiane F. – Wir Kinder vom Bahnhof Zoo

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Heroes / Helden

Heroes / Helden

The bleak music of Bowie’s collaborations with Brian Eno provides a fitting backdrop to this film, as his icy soul killer prose perfectly reflected the frozen and fragmented lives of Christiane and her gang: an “alternative family” taking respite in discos and underground train stations of 1970′s West Berlin. Removed from that context, the album is still enjoyable for the sheer quality of the songs. The cliché about David Bowie says he’s a musical chameleon, adapting himself according to fashion and trends. While such a criticism is glib, there’s no denying that Bowie demonstrated remarkable skill for perceiving musical trends at his peak in the ’70s.

The film itself is based on the testimony of a teenager (Vera Christiane Felscherinow) who gets involved in drugs at 12, hooked on heroin by 13 and a prostitute by 14 to support her habit. She became part of a notorious group of teenaged drug-users and prostitutes, mainly at the largest train station in West Berlin – Bahnof Zoo. Her story came to light after a meeting with two journalists while she was a witness in a trial against a man who paid underaged girls with heroin in return for sex. The journalists wanted to expose the problem among teenagers in Berlin which was plainly surrounded by strong taboos. Christiane provided an in-depth description of the life of drugs and prostitution that she and other teenagers in West Berlin experienced in the 1970′s. Her interviews were extensive, taking a total of 2 months to produce. A book was eventually published chronicling her life from 1975 to 1978, when she was aged 12 to 15. In 1981 the story was made into a film directed by Uli Edel. Christiane worked as an advisor on the film and much is shot on location in authentic and gloomy surroundings of Gropiusstadt and Bahnhof Zoo. The actors here are genuine teenagers, around 14 to 15 years old. This makes the film so much more powerful and shocking, and much more believable. The effects of heroin on these kids is staggering to behold; they turn into these sickly shadows of their former selves, like zombies, in search of their next fix. And strangely, Christiane and her friends never seem to enjoy the high from the heroin. You will never see such a bleak vision of kids lost in a surreal hell of drug addiction. And to add further to the intensity, the film is long, 138 minutes uncut, becoming steadily darker and seedier by the minute, until the viewer wonders just how long can this young girl go on like this without completely self-destructing. And amazingly, throughout the running time, the film never preaches, never becomes sentimental, as most American drug films often do. The film style is specifically German.

Verite

Verite


It’s interesting to note the film does not glamorize heroin, as soon as the hard drug abuse begins in the film, the mood changes entirely. The uplifting and snappy music of Bowie whom Christiane worships is heard frequently throughout the first section of the film – there is a moment of insight and revelation when Christiane goes to see Bowie in concert – where he appears as himself in the film. After her and her friends fall into heroin addiction the Bowie music symbolically disappears, to be replaced by the eerie Eno-driven sound-scapes. The atmosphere is gritty and dark, pulling no punches with its depiction of Berlin in those days. The days look dark and gloomy to begin with, as the film progresses the day resembles more and more the night. Great locations and beautiful if functional photography complete this unique, raw and graphic film. In it’s nature it completely takes away the idea of the highs and lows of the typical drug film.
christiane3
Some of Bowie’s very best music is compiled here. There are the obviously cinematic tracks – the steely proto-techno glide of ‘V-2 Schneider’, the dark ambience of ‘Warszawa’ and ‘Sense Of Doubt’ – alongside the jagged pop of ‘Boys Keep Swinging’. ‘Christiane F.’ holds one fascinating rarity, too: a version of his finest song, ‘Heroes’, that lapses into impassioned German halfway through (extracted from the German edition of the ‘Heroes’ album). As the faintly ludicrous climax of Bowie’s infatuation with the Deutsche scene, it completes an essential and compelling album. You can download that track here. By the mid-’70s, he developed an effete, sophisticated version of Philly soul that he dubbed “plastic soul,” which eventually morphed into the eerie avant-pop of 1976′s Station to Station, which took the plastic soul of Young Americans into darker, avant-garde-tinged directions, yet was also a huge hit, generating the top ten single ‘Golden Years.’ The album inaugurated Bowie’s persona of the elegant ‘Thin White Duke,’ and it reflected Bowie’s growing cocaine-fueled paranoia. Soon, he decided his Los Angeles lifestyle was too boring and returned to England; shortly after arriving back in London, he gave the awaiting crowd a Nazi salute, a signal of his growing, drug-addled detachment from reality. The incident caused enormous controversy, and Bowie left the country to settle in Berlin, where he lived and worked with Brian Eno. Once in Berlin, Bowie sobered up and began painting, as well as studying art. He also developed a fascination with German electronic music, which Eno helped him fulfill with the work which went on to make up the majority of this soundtrack album.

After the initial success of the book and the film, Christiane found herself becoming an unlikely celebrity, both in Germany and other countries in Western Europe. A subculture of teenage girls in Germany began to emulate her style of dress as well as making visits to the Bahnhof Zoo station, which became an unlikely tourist attraction. This surprised authorities on youth drug abuse, who feared that despite the film’s bleakness and the many sordid scenes (particularly those portraying the horrific realities of cold turkey), vulnerable youths may have regarded Christiane as a cult heroine and role model. Wolf Heckmann, West Berlin’s drug commissioner of the time: “The book and film have increased interest in drugs in this city. Kids who come to visit used to ask to see the Berlin Wall. Now they want to see the Zoo Station.” The book sold so well (it was translated into most major West European languages) that Christiane remains able to support herself from the royalties. Christiane still receives fan-mail and is occasionally contacted by the German media, wanting to know how she is doing after all these years.

Download: David Bowie – Heroes / Helden

David Bowie – Review Timeline

Original Soundtrack on Discogs

Time Magazine Article from 1981

Christiane F Fan Website

Public Information Films

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Many musical artists have been heavily influenced by the analogue, overdriven sound of British Public Information Films. Bands such as Boards Of Canada and artists on the Ghost Box Record label such as The Advisory Circle. Another example would be the song Charly by The Prodigy which sampled the meows of a cat called Charley in a “Say No To Strangers” campaign on ITV. Which is, of course, why they decided to call said track Charly. The song went on to become one of the early classics of breakbeat music, paving the way for the big beat explosion of the mid/late Nineties.

Charley says relax

Charley says: Don't trust strangers


For the first time on the National Archives website you can now view complete public information films from 1945 – 2006. Joining with the Central Office of Information (COI) to feature a selection of some of Britain’s most memorable and influential public information films. Historically, they reflect the issues of the day; nostalgically, everyone has a favourite.
Family fallout

Family fallout


The Central Office of Information was established in 1946, when the Prime Minister, Clement Attlee, announced that the wartime Ministry of Information would be closed down, but that official information services still had, ‘an important and permanent part in the machinery of government’ and that ‘the public should be adequately informed about the many matters in which Government action directly impinges on their daily lives’. They have provided information and influenced behaviour since the end of the Second World War – advising the public on a multitude of situations ranging from crossing the road to surviving a nuclear attack.

The films always had a general low-budget quality adding to their nostalgia today. There was always an infamous static crackle before hand, giving them a Hammer Horror style aura. Some were quite terrifying and remained ingrained in the child’s psyche well into adulthood. One series which definitely fits into the unnerving category but not strictly a COI film is a series from the 1970s hosted by none other than beloved Yorkshire proto-chav, Jimmy Savile. It was called Play it Safe and used to be on Sunday, tea time, just before Songs of Praise and yep, there was some scary stuff on there. As far as possible the presentation was by interviews with parents and children who had had an actual accident, who spoke of their reactions and lessons they had learned. Most accidents Savile focussed on feature the phrase “permanent brain damage”. The films are actually quite heart-rending, the tragic testimonials from victims of what can only be described as pretty thoughtless design in the British municipal housing stock of the 1960′s and 70′s – in this film for example…

Charley

National Film Archives

Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Leonard Cohen

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The folks at Pitchfork have offered up this 45-minute film, offering a candid glimpse of Cohen’s pre-singer-songwriter days. Directed by Donald Brittain and Don Owen, produced in 1965, this 45-minute promo for the then youthful looking Leonard Cohen functions now as a faded cinematic snapshot of the man who, in the forty years since the promo was made, has evolved into arguably the world’s greatest living poet. You can buy this on VHS or DVD if you want to own it. The DVD has a few supplemental short films and a couple of marvelous video montages coupled with Cohen’s poetry.

Click to watch

Click to watch

Pitchfork

Buy on Amazon

IMDB

Easy Rider – Route From The Movie

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The countercultural opus starring Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper followed a route which exposed spectacular landscapes and locations to a generation. A Harley Davidson fanatic over at Mr Zip 66 has put together a guide to following the route Billy and Wyatt took from California to Louisiana. He kindly provides a few tips to get you started: “First off, don’t sell coke to finance your trip. If you do, don’t tell anyone. Definitely don’t put coke money in your gas tank, because it’ll lower your gas mileage. If you want to go to Mexico and pretend to buy coke in an old truck, knock yourself out. Put it in 2 motorcycle batteries and go sell it to someone who looks like Phil Spector in front of the runway at LAX. Phil would probably still buy it from you, but he’s busy now serving his murder sentence. Don’t be offended if he fails to calls you back.”

First of all, watch this it will set the tone for the whole run:

He provides shots from the film along with pictures of how these places look now – some remarkably unchanged. For example: “The Sacred Mountain Gas Station. It used to be a gas station, but now it’s the home of someone. He’s a nice guy. He will more than likely tell you some good stories. He may not. Either way, you’re on an adventure. Tell the hippie he owes you a tank of gas.”

Sacred Mountain Gas Station in the film

Sacred Mountain Gas Station in the film

Sacred Mountain Gas Station today

Sacred Mountain Gas Station today

When you get to New Orleans, it’s Mardi Gras. Its Mecca man! Party like a rockstar, do whatever you do, because tomorrow you’re going to get shot by a short redneck. I’m not trying to be  a downer, I’m just saying. It could happen. The rednecks in the Louisiana coffee shop who taunt the boys, and the two in the pickup truck at the end of the movie, were all local residents recruited by the filmmakers. In the case of the coffee shop denizens, the filmmakers were preparing to audition a group of local theater people when Dennis Hopper saw Buddy Causey Jr., Duffy Lafont and several others watching them and making wisecracks and decided to use them instead.

Easy Rider – Internet Movie Database

Guide to the route taken in the movie

Un Chien Andalou (An Andalusian Dog)

Thursday, November 19th, 2009
Look sharp

Look sharp

Sitting comfortably in a dark room, dazzled by the light and the movement which exert a quasi-hypnotic power … fascinated by the interest of human faces and the rapid changes of place, cultivated individual placidly accepts the most appalling themes … and all this naturally sanctioned by habitual morality, government, and international censorship, religion, dominated by good taste and enlivened by white humor and other prosaic imperatives of reality. – Luis Buñuel

Controversial?

Controversial?

Luis Buñel and Slavador Dali created this 16-minute short film in 1929 featuring a series of startling and horrifying visions. Iconic imagery such as a womans eyeball being sliced slowly open with a razor blade crosscut with a similarly shaped cloud moving across the moon was received well by surrealists of the time and continues to be shown regularly in film schools and societies today.

At this time, cinema was still a new art-form prime to be experimented with. Buñel and Dali were not scandalists but definitely sought attention from intellectuals and newspaper editors alike. Buñuel and Dalí carried sacks of rocks in their pockets on opening night as self-defense, expecting a negative response from the audience. They were disappointed when the audience enjoyed the film, making the evening “less exciting”, according to Dalí. They followed a simple formula that if words can be poetic and a picture can tell a thousand words thus a moving image can be more meaningful still. For example: The French phrase “ants in the palms,” (which means that someone is “itching” to kill) is shown literally when ants emerge from a wound in a hand in a sort of Freudian stigmata. The filmmakers were fascinated by what the psyche could create through its suppressed emotions.

The film has been referenced copiously in pop culture, from David Bowie showing the film in its entirety at the beginning of every concert during his 1976 “Station to Station” tour. (If you’ve ever heard an audience groan at the opening scene, imagine an entire auditorium, most of whom were undoubtedly seeing it for the first time.) Most famously perhaps is Pixes song Debaser from the album Doolittle. Un chien andalou is referenced when sung by Frank Black “Slicin’ up eyeballs / I want you to know!”. To quote Frank Black: “I wish Buñuel was still alive. He made this film about nothing in particular. The title itself is a nonsense. With my stupid, pseudo-scholar, naive, enthusiast, avant-garde-ish, amateurish way to watch Un chien andalou (twice), I thought: ‘Yeah, I will make a song about it.’ [He sings:] “Un chien andalou”…. It sounds too French, so I will sing “un chien andalusia”, it sounds good, no?”.

Although many cinéastes have tried to psycholanalyse the filmmakers, Buñel made clear through his correspondence with Dali that “no idea or image lending itself to rational explanation would be accepted … Nothing in film symbolizes anything.”

The film is so powerful today because themes of love, sex, death, and decay are eternal and will always attract artists and audiences alike. If you are interested in surrealism, film or both, this would be a great place to start.

By way of Wikipedia sourced trivia we discovered both of the leading actors eventually committed suicide: Batcheff overdosed on Veronal on April 13, 1932 in a hotel in Paris, and Mareuil committed self-immolation on October 24, 1954 by dousing herself in gasoline and burning herself to death in a public square in Perigueux, Dordogne.

The 25 Most Shocking Moments In Movie History

La chien andalou reviewed by Roger Ebert

Film Reference

I Love Hotdogs

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

If your into classic and cult films it would be worth your while to check Shannon Maldonado’s I Love Hotdogs. Several times a week Shannon curates a selection of stills from a particular movie. Her selection process sometimes includes typographic and design details that can easily go unnoticed (think street signs, window lettering, etc.). For fans of the art of film title design, there’s plenty of that stuff as well.

Some of the more benign and banal films appear more powerful in still form. Try the slapstick (but hilarious) Airplane or a bit of computer love with Tron.

Teenage Mother - 1967, The voiceover of this trailer is the best: “Teenage Muhtha, means nine months a’ trouble!” and “May very well be the most impawtant movie you will ever see!”

Teenage Mother - 1967, The voiceover of this trailer is the best: “Teenage Muhtha, means nine months a’ trouble!” and “May very well be the most impawtant movie you will ever see!”

Total Recall - 1990, Arnold Schwarzenegger in a turban. If I am not me, then who the hell am I? -Douglas Quaid

Total Recall - 1990, Arnold Schwarzenegger in a turban. If I am not me, then who the hell am I? -Douglas Quaid

They Shoot Horses, Don't They - 1969, Who would ever envision a dance contest becoming so grotesque and absolutely heart breaking. Roberts sad eyes, the sleaze ball contest producer, the unraveling of Alice, that poor pregnant girl, the disco ball and let’s not forget Jane Fonda. Aside from the characters: the clothes, hair, the ballroom decorations and soft lighting. Again, perfect!

They Shoot Horses, Don't They - 1969, Who would ever envision a dance contest becoming so grotesque and absolutely heart breaking. Roberts sad eyes, the sleaze ball contest producer, the unraveling of Alice, that poor pregnant girl, the disco ball and let’s not forget Jane Fonda. Aside from the characters: the clothes, hair, the ballroom decorations and soft lighting - all perfect!

Airplane - 1980, Hilarious bits: the dance scene at the dive bar, “Jive Talking” with subtitles (Ah, 80s racism), the inflatable auto pilot.

Airplane - 1980, Hilarious bits: the dance scene at the dive bar, “Jive Talking” with subtitles (Ah, 80s racism), the inflatable auto pilot.

Tron - 1980, “Trapped inside an electronic arena, where love, and escape, do not compute!”

Tron - 1980, “Trapped inside an electronic arena, where love, and escape, do not compute!”

I Love Hotdogs