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I WISH YOU WOULD (Ryland Walker Knight, 2021)


Ryland's latest film reminds me of an unexpected combination of two independent artists with very different approaches to the outside world. On the one hand, there is a certain John Magary vib...

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True Mothers (Naomi Kawase, 2020)

I know the conventional wisdom on True Mothers is that it's another Kawase dud. But I beg to differ. It's obviously not perfect. It's the most plot-driven film Kawase has made thus far, and ther...

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Nightjohn (Charles Burnett, 1996)

Nightjohn is based on a 1993 book by Gary Paulsen, a popular author of children's fiction. The film adaptation was co-produced by Hallmark and the Disney Channel, and as one watches Burnett's fi...

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Four Films by Malcolm Le Grice

For a good long while, the films of the British structuralists were seldom seen, in part because of their bad reputation. There are various reasons for this, among them national chauvinism as well as a b...

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To Sleep With Anger (Charles Burnett, 1990)

Early this mornin'
when you knocked upon my door
Early this mornin', ooh
when you knocked upon my door
And I said, "Hello, Satan,"
I believe it's time to go."
(Robert Johnson, "Me...

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Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn (Radu Jude, 2021)

With his 2018 film, "I Do Not Care If We Go Down in History as Barbarians," Radu Jude introduced a style of self-reflexivity and Godardian disruption that I quite liked in theory. Not m...

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Quo Vadis, Aida? (Jasmila Žbanić, 2020)

Quo Vadis, Aida? is fine work by any standard, but leave it to me to find some niggling problems with it. Žbanić's film is well acted, expertly shot and edited, and successfully conveys the ho...

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The Quoddy Fold (Paulette Phillips, 2019)


A "quoddy," I just learned, is a type of sailboat traditionally used for fishing. It is very specific to the area where Maine meets New Brunswick, and it is a colloquialism that will mark one ...

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LINE STARTS HERE!

I'm sure you've seen this by now, if you're the type of person who would watch things like this. I find this to be a multi-layered narrative worth unpacking. Bath and Body Works is a particular kind of store: a mid-priced mall shop that sells its customers the (literal) aroma of bourgeois luxury ...

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Films by Sara Kathryn Arledge

First, I want to thank James Hansen for alerting me to the fact that these films are streamable through the Pacific Film Archive. I'd have missed them otherwise. I recall first encountering Sara Kathryn Arledge's name in Wheeler Winston Dixon's 1997 book The Exploding Eye, a sort of alte...

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I've Been Afraid (Cecelia Condit, 2020)

The Internet is stupid, and for the most part, memes are the stupidest part of the stupid Internet. But occasionally, people inexplicably latch onto something worthwhile, momentarily bringing it out of o...

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Social Hygiene (Denis Côté, 2021)

The title is a sly joke. While it's true that in the course of Côté's film, an unseen character is described as badly needing a shower, "social hygiene" actually refers to the COVID-19 protocols under ...

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Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy (Ryusuke Hamaguchi, 2021)

THIS REVIEW IS TOTALLY SPOILERIFIC. SORRY.

A triptych of stories that are mostly unrelated, Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy, as the title implies, is about the role of chance in our lives, in...

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Come Here (Anocha Suwichakornpong, 2021)

For awhile now, I've needed to go back and rewatch Anocha's 2016 film By the Time It Gets Dark, a film I did not much care for at the time. It's one of those instances in which a film has a very...

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The Girl and the Spider (Ramon Zürcher and Silvan Zürcher, 2021)

[NOTE: Despite the watermarks on these stills, nothing will happen if you press 8.]

I think I can safely say that most readers of this Patre-blog were probably as bowled over as I was upon seeing R...

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The Annihilation of Fish (Charles Burnett, 1999)

In getting started on the films of Charles Burnett, I decided to go with his film maudit, something I would probably never have gotten around to watching were it not for this project. Although t...

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Scattered Clouds / Two in the Shadow (Mikio Naruse, 1967)

As I mentioned at the end of my notes on Wife! Be Like a Rose!, Naruse certainly paid attention to the groundbreaking work that Douglas Sirk was doing in the 1950s. The complex interplay of melo...

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France Against the Robots (Jean-Marie Straub, 2020)

In just under ten minutes, Straub's newest film disrupts any lingering ideas we may have about historical pro...

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Wife! Be Like a Rose! (Mikio Naruse, 1935)

If one wanted to embark on a post-structuralist analysis of Naruse, I'd submit that Wife! Be Like a Rose! would be a fantastic place to start. Traversed by numerous ideological double-binds, thi...

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March Auteur Tiebreak: COCK/BURN


There were two clear leaders, so now let's see how this shakes out.

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Hey gang, THE MURDER OF FRED HAMPTON...

is available to watch online, totally free.

https://vimeo.com/434141029

Check it out.

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Gaping Holes: Getting to Know You Pt.3

Hey, I still have a few days (and a few Naruses) to go, but I wanted to get the March poll going. As you may notice, I have swapped out a couple of nonstarters with new options. And I've dropped in a major figure I'm woefully behind on, even though I have seen seven of his films. Choose wisely! View Post

Short Takes, or, Catching Up From the Hard Freeze

Because of my exciting Bear Grylls adventure in Texas living, I've fallen a bit behind in writing up films. As it happens, I feel no particular need to go long on these.

Psalm IV: Valley of...

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Yearning (Mikio Naruse, 1964)

I'm all lost in the supermarket
I can no longer shop happily
I came in here for that special offer
A guaranteed personality

"Uneven development" is a bit of a cliche in critical t...

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Once Again, I Want to Die

I just learned that there is a new zoomer trend / meme asserting, quite sincerely, that Helen Keller never existed. Because, dude, there's just no way...

https://twitter.com/theneedledrop/status...

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Older Brother, Younger Sister (Mikio Naruse, 1953)

First of all, my apologies for not being deeper into Naruse at this point. Last week was pretty rough. Now I am dealing with the aftermath of the winter storm, which means fixing a lot of screwed-up plum...

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Two Days in the Hamptons

Judas and the Black Messiah (Shaka King, 2021)

This is a film with a great deal of ostensibly political content, but it's not at all clear what its agenda actually is. One of my ol...

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What Did the Lady Forget? (Yasujiro Ozu, 1937)

An Ozu comedy, although neither as broad or as melancholy as I Was Born, But... This strikes me as a very strange film, although I suspect it falls in line with dominant ideas of the time regard...

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A Little History

By some odd quirk of the YouTube algorithm, this excerpt from The Dick Cavett Show popped up on my watch list. It's just under 24 minutes, and I humbly suggest you watch it. It's a panel discussion assembled on June 7, 1968 -- the day after Robert Kennedy was assassinated. A few things are startl...

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3x3D (various directors, 2013)

I watched this because I happened to have it on my fully-charged laptop when the power went out, and I needed a distraction from the biting cold. I certainly don't have insights to offer that can compare with 2021-02-18 05:22:12 +0000 UTC View Post