Archive for the ‘Cinema of Exultation’ Category

A gift to the world from Mr. Sir Vincent Dr. Gagnepain, A.B.C.D.E.

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009 by Andrew

You know who’s awe­some? Vvinni. You know what he makes? Stuff like this:


Lamplight Breakfast on a Burning Kitten on Vimeo.

Did you know that he has a blog? Now you do.

In 500 Words: Christmas on Mars

Friday, January 2nd, 2009 by Andrew

Due to the abject groovi­ness of The Flaming Lips, Christmas on Mars is embed­ded below in its entirety, for your view­ing pleasure:

Two men in pres­sur­ized suits dec­o­rate a Christmas tree in the harsh atmos­phere of Mars. Moths flut­ter through a dete­ri­o­rat­ing space sta­tion. A man dressed as Santa dies a ter­ri­ble death of his own infliction.

The Flaming Lips’ much-anticipated film debut is the first fea­ture film I have found that fits the def­i­n­i­tions put forth in my com­ments on the Cinema of Exultation: it incor­po­rates low-fidelity visual effects, seemingly-unrehearsed dia­logue, cheaply-constructed sets and cos­tumes, occa­sional bursts of vivid color, and for­mal ref­er­ences to pop cul­tural phe­nom­ena. This is hardly sur­pris­ing, judg­ing from the group’s prove­nance. What is sur­pris­ing is that the film is not only engag­ing and well-made, but also a flu­ent piece of cin­ema that I can best describe as Fellini plus Lynch plus Kubrick, divided by Santa Claus Conquers the Martians. Bradley Beesley’s 16mm cin­e­matog­ra­phy is worth not­ing for its deli­cious, high-contrast black-and-white, punc­tu­ated by seizures of impos­si­ble color.

Director (and Flaming Lips front man) Wayne Coyne’s strik­ing imagery makes it clear that Christmas on Mars is to be taken seri­ously. At the same time, Coyne’s inex­pe­ri­ence is self-evident, with results both neg­a­tive and pos­i­tive. For instance, it’s hard to shake the sen­sa­tion that Christmas was made for stoners—the nar­ra­tive is weak, and it can’t hold a can­dle to the trippy visu­als and score. However, Coyne’s unfa­mil­iar­ity with dia­logue direc­tion and his deci­sion to cast non-actors in lead roles ulti­mately pays off with some of the most nat­u­rally awk­ward con­ver­sa­tions I’ve ever seen on film. Conversations are sur­real affairs, and “real” direc­tors for­get this. Coyne, either by design or because he wasn’t pay­ing atten­tion, com­mit­ted to film some scenes that would impress Stanislavski him­self. Of course the lack of direc­to­r­ial expe­ri­ence is a double-edged blade, and there are plenty of exam­ples of per­for­mance that falls flat.

On the topic of per­for­mance, Steven Drozd’s act­ing is beau­ti­fully per­sonal and reminds me of how Hamlet might behave if he were sent to live in a colony on Mars. Adam Goldberg’s brief appear­ance as Dr. Scott Zero is stunning.

Christmas on Mars is far from per­fect. When you play in the realm of the art house, espe­cially as cav­a­lierly as Coyne does with Christmas, you have to be pre­pared to be dinged by crit­ics. The end­ing is an anti­cli­max that can’t match the inten­sity and genius of the first thirty min­utes. Christmas has an obses­sion with ref­er­ences to female gen­i­talia that, although not entirely out of place, could have been greatly min­i­mized. A lot of what should be sub­tle metaphor is instead trite and dis­taste­ful pseudo-intellectual navel-gazing. Christmas is at its best when at its most vis­ceral. The gap­ing mouth of a dead Santa Claus requires no interpretation.

As a fresh­man effort, this film is noth­ing short of astound­ing. It holds value as a piece of Flaming Lips ephemera, but it could just as eas­ily be a piece of cin­e­matic history.

Dear Wayne,

Please make another one.

[rate 3.5]

Lionel Washington has a posse

Wednesday, December 24th, 2008 by Andrew

Get your degree in IDIONOMICS.

(among other things) CARROTS!

Cinema of Exultation (In which I over-analyze Tim & Eric)

Thursday, December 11th, 2008 by Andrew

Feast your eyes on the spec­tac­u­lar visual explo­sion that is MGMT’s video for Time to Pretend, directed by Ray Tintori:

[High-Resolution QuickTime] (yes, it’s also on YouTube, but I’m not even going to link to it there because you HAVE to see it in high res­o­lu­tion to get even the slight­est idea what is going on in the video)

See also Eric Wareheim’s video for MGMT’s The Youth:

[YouTube Link] [High-Resolution Quicktime]

And if you haven’t yet, do your­self a favor and go check out Tim & Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! on Adult Swim.

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