Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Suspiria (Classic Movies) 5/5


Suspiria (Classic Movies) 
5/5



An enigmatic German ballet house entraps visitors, unleashing a chaos filled with cacophonous screams and draconious swirls of apothic necromancy. Sinister, harlequin shapes backdrop in contrast to the harmony of cryptic terpsichoreans tiptoeing  in voluptuous motion. Beneath it's monumental design, is an orchestral eeriness evoked in Goblin's rock spells of demonic dissonance, amplifiying Argento's synthesizing arpeggio of spellbinding incarcerations, reaching a height in a Giallo genre that normally consists of hodgepodges such as, “The Bird with the Crystal Plumage” and “A Lizard in a Woman's Skin”. Shifts in illusion are hinted and represented in the robust mixtures of the aquatic-crimsons as it was trialed in the rowens of "Inferno" and "Mother of Tears". Nowhere in these workings though was Argento's poetic palette of phantasmagoric witchery more present than in each harrowing background constructed here in "Suspiria", the first part of "Three Mother's Trilogy".

In the center of any discussion on Gothic movie and television entertainment, "Suspiria" is mentioned, re-iterated, and re-visited. It's distinct flair in cinematography by Luciano Tovoli calls upon a dreamscape of noirs in color and the German silent film favorites like " Dr. Caligari", evoking familiarity in it’s blackened corridors; the unraveling of abstract shapes and figurines draped more-or-less in cast shadow. A moon illuminating each character’s appearance is present despite being ominously felt inside, invisible beneath it’s exterior, similar in any film-noir capturing of a subject for that matter.


Inspired by Disney's "Snow White and Seven Dwarfs", Argento seems to find the Queen the most interesting character to model on as the blueprint since it his her dark, menacing personality as a movie villain that seems to encompass what the overall tone of the movie relies on. Rainy weather, dead trees, eccentric airports, and smoky atmospheres crackle the dread and angst of this technicolor extremity. Flickering hallway lights meet and burst crimson, mixed with glittering obelisks and pasted death-florals, blossoming a shamanistic repertoire in vacillating verse.


Jessica Harper (Insects) plays the protagonist Suzy Bannon, an American dancer traveling to enroll at this academy. Discovering that the house is haunted by the witch, Bannon
 traverses through the house’s convoluted mazes comprising  outlandish, pop-out scares that the witch has in store. Joan Bennet (Scarlett Street and Dark Shadows) plays Madame Blanc, offering nostalgic trips to a Gothic past with her supporting role as the teacher. Barbara Magnolfi (The Suspicious Death of a Minor) as Olga, a female dancer participating with the team, adding onto the Gothic vibe.

Suspiria to this day stands as an orphan at the end of a grim paragraph as European cinema transitions from a golden age of nonlinear storytelling and into one that is  shoddy with low-budget B-movie thrills and cheap entertainment. Standing up to a lot of modern horror that have an over-indulged thought with CGI, Suspiria is a breakaway from that norm utilizing old school tactics to stage it’s focal point of fear. It is also a difficult one to age since most films released  around this time weren’t as daring in it’s visual appeal. We need more films that are far-reaching like it; films that can find a consistency and mature grasp on it's range of psychedelic opaqueness. Suspiria does just that; even going a little bit farther beyond what is expected before these moments of suspense and after. For it's sheer uniqueness alone, it is re-discussed and re-interpreted by film experts, remaining one of the genre’s hallmarks.


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Sunday, April 8, 2018

Wong Kar-wai - Godard




Wong Kar-Wai's work is a dark, sparkling diamond in the rough of Hong Kong cinema. Poetic albeit obscure, Kar-wai offers a refreshing, distinctive vision in an underground scene that has grown weary of the cliched wuxia flick. Unlike his contemporaries, Kar-wai breaks the mold by drawing inspiration from the French New Wave, in particular, the vibrant complimentary backdrops found in Godard's technicolor feats like 'Pierrot' and 'Contempt', or Demy's melodramatic love letters in the 'Umbrellas of Cherbourg' and the 'Sisters of Rochefort'. These films that may contain a senstivity to light and color from the cinematography department, are largely in contrast with Kar-Wai's choice of multi-layered narrative loops. Kar-Wai's work as a whole truly examines the possibility of what the New Wave would be if the style is resurrected in the present day with modern camera work that offers more sophisticated shot angles, slo-motion tracking, greater color scales, and bold visceral filters. 



Kar-Wai is the movement's ideal successor in adding to it's broad lexicon devices of dreams and memories to stream parallel with a subject's action making for a composited abstract poem. If Godard is the Picasso then Kar-Wai is like the extension of this with hints of arthouse flair. Contrasting from the New Wave's scatter mindedness, Kar-wai demonstrates sensitivity and growth  to this abstraction. Within a romance genre that has lacked a sophistication in it's execution, the enigma that Kar-Wai has presented to us and wants his audiences to solve while on a ride that consists of twists and turns, is a point of observance that the viewer must draw from introspection. Understanding is sometimes the farthest point from empathy here. What remains stagnant and cohesive is the feeling of attachment and attraction between each character interaction. Similar to the ambiguity in a Godard narrative, Kar-Wai adds emotion to his characters so that the viewer can leave questioning the story while marveling at a romantic bond that is conflicted by a forgetfulness of dreams and memories. This bond can only be entirely solved on a personal level just as any moment of isolation would inhibit the thoughts of a poet's voice in a dark apartment space like in '2046'. The events that occur before and after may be subliminal to the emotion experienced in between action.  What happens in the past, present and future is integral and doesn't necessarily apply here in a Kar-Wai film. Once we realize that occurence is rather blended with the hue of Kar-Wai's amtospheric backgrounds, the emotions expressed is the missing key to this chaotic metropolitan setting; words become more palatable through poetic verses than the third-person.

With the exception of Yimou, Kar-Wai may be the most prominent filmmaker to arise from Hong Kong's scene in the 90's. His work should be recognized as the very hallmark to cinema in China.

Magic Dance

Jump magic, jump (jump magic, jump)
Jump magic, jump (jump magic, jump)
Put that magic jump on me!