Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Quentin Killed Tarantino! You Basterds!

Little is needed by way of summary for Quentin Tarantino’s latest effort, a ridiculous, revisionist romp through WWII-era France.

We all know that Inglourious Basterds has been a pet project of Tarantino’s since he was knee-high to a movie camera, that it features a garrote-scarred Brad Pitt drawling about Nazi scalps, and, if you’ve seen it, that it is kind of a let down. To be sure, I’ve no wish to malign the director of Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs, so if what follows reads a bit like a laundry list of complaints about the Basterds, it is so only to the extent to which Tarantino’s new film falls short of the impeccably high standards he’s set for himself.

We might start by pointing out all the tiny problems with the film: Tarantino makes some unfortunate casting choices that, for me at least, really seemed to work against the film (see: Austin Powers and that dude from The Office); the narrative is woefully linear, lacking all the free-wheeling liberties with plot structure I’ve come to love and expect from a Tarantino flick; furthermore, after the choreographed exactitude of Kill Bill, some of action in the Basterds feels a little slight and sloppy, and finally, perhaps under the influence of his fellow director, friend and actor in the film, Eli Roth, the glorious stylized violence characteristic of Tarantino’s earlier work has here given way to a ponderous predilection for gore. These are, however, ultimately petty and forgivable flaws.

The bigger problems facing Inglourious Basterds seem to have more to do with failures of what Tarantino does best.

First, as far as the Basterds go, the movie gives us little that its trailers don’t. Where is the nuanced and fraught interplay of characters we get from the gang is Reservoir Dogs? Where are the grotesque biographic back-stories of the rogue’s gallery in Kill Bill? We want a cadre of complex and strange characters that live up to the title of the film—we want inglorious bastards. What we get, however, are caricatures that are barely on screen long enough to be introduced. To be fair, Tarantino is said to be planning follow up films in which, hopefully, he’ll round out his Nazi-hating sons-of-bitches a bit more.

The real snags in this movie, however, show up where Tarantino ought to be strongest. Take the film’s trudging self-reflexivity. Formerly, Tarantino could slyly poke his finger in the eye of movie conventions and lore with a lovingly clever touch and a renegade grace. But in Inglourious Basterds, when, for instance we get a Samuel L Jackson voice-over lecturing on the properties of nitrate film stock, the whole thing just seems like an obligatory exercise. Moreover, the abiding motif of the film, namely, that in a way, the movies make (and re-make) our own history, is pushed so hard that it begins to feel like a nitwit attempt at profundity. (I must admit, however, that Tarantino’s off-the-cuff survey of Weimar Cinema is a lot of fun.)

Lover of subtitled films that I am, the biggest problem I have with Inglourious Basterds is one that I am almost reluctant to admit, but being principally in French and German, the film lacks that trademark wit, at once incisive and profane, that is Tarantino dialog at its best. This is part of a broader hang-up I have with this film: to put a fine point on it, the film’s subject matter simply doesn’t seem to jibe with Tarantino’s style. While his approach to filmmaking has always been one that synthesizes the ephemeral schlock of worldwide cinema, music and art, in his other films, Tarantino’s stylistic schizophrenia always achieves a sort of cohesion in an American pop-cultural milieu. Inglourious Basterds tries the same operation within a Fascist aesthetic and by way of a reliance on Nazi kitsch, and it just doesn’t work. As a result, the movie feels like it never quite knows how to hold itself together.

Inglourious Basterds has its share of faults, though it has its moments, too. Take for instance, the film’s climactic set-piece: its overwhelming similarity to the finale of Raiders of the Lost Ark aside, it is about two minutes of movie making that can hold its own along side any of the best moments in Tarantino’s career. And if Inglourious Basterds is ultimately a failure, it is at least an interesting one, serving as an object lesson in what Mr. Tarantino usually gets so right.


-Heath Iverson

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

A Serious Film List

To mark the release of the new Coen brothers movie, A Serious Man, on October 2nd, we asked cast member and friend of Facets, Amy Landecker, to share a list of her favorite films.

Find it and much more at Facets First! And don't forget to subscribe to Facets First!, either--it's free! The action begins here.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Polanski Watch

Zurich Film Festival stunned by Polanski arrest. -Screendaily

Actors and film directors from around the world sign petition denouncing Polanski's arrest and demanding that he be freed, French media reports.
-News24

Polanski to fight extradition. -Yahoo

Bravo, Gentlemen. Bravo.



Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig vs. asshole with cell phone in theater audience.

Friday, September 25, 2009

What We're Watching Returns!

It's been far too long since the last What We're Watching segment here a Facets Features. Apologies. Won't happen again. Suffice to say, our staff has seen a whole lot in the interim, but let's focus on the recent to avoid a mammoth list!

One Potato, Two Potato (Larry Peerce, 1964) - I watched an indie film from 1964 called One Potato, Two Potato about an interracial couple who marry in a small town in Ohio–and what happens to them afterward. This was three years before Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, and it’s a far, far better film – much more realistic. It was shot entirely on location in Painesville, Ohio, and it makes excellent use of a small-town atmosphere without stereotyping small-town life. The look and locations are authentic, which makes the story believable and effective. Directed by Larry Peerce, who’s had a sporadic career going back and forth between low-budget films and tv, this film was daring for its time but not strident. It’s not on DVD or any other format, but the Turner Classic Movies station (TCM) is showing the movie on November 20th in the evening. Indie films from back in the day are much more interesting and daring than some of the self-absorbed junk today turned out by twenty-something directors who think their childhoods should be fodder for yet another movie on suburban angst. (Susan Doll)

South Park: Seasons One and Two (1997-98) - Yard sales are a treasure-trove, particularly the one that I stumbled upon in Chicago's Ukrainian Village a few weeks back. For 5 bucks a pop, I picked up Seasons One and Two of quite possibly the funniest cartoon series in television history. Compared with the relatively slick, but still rough around the edges veneer of current episodes, these early runs look positively archaic. The animation does nothing to detract from the humor, though, which is just as knife sharp, raunchy and topical as present episodes, with jabs at homophobia, celebrity, assisted suicide, the anti-drug crusade, and more. And an elephant makes sweet love to a pig. Sold. (Phil Morehart)

Spellbound (Alfred Hitchcock, 1945) - All good things: Amnesia-driven mystery, sexually suggestive editing, sweeping Rozsa score, playing "Where's Hitchcock?", dream sequence inspired by Dali, and female psychoanalyst (Ingrid Bergman) getting too personal with her forgetful patient (Gregory Peck). The one minor drawback is not being able to watch said Swedish star without thinking about how Kyle MacLachlan put his disease in her daughter. Shiver. (Brian Elza)

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Blast! Off

This Friday, Facets Cinematheque premieres Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Paul Devlin’s new film, Blast! The feature documents the travails and triumphs of astrophysicists working to launch an experimental satellite and, in the process, gain a greater understanding of our place in the universe.

Of course, Devlin’s film is by no means the first to look to the stars and contemplate big questions--namely: who are we and how do we fit into the grand scheme of things. What follows, then, is recommended viewing by way of complementary preparation for coming out to see Blast!

Science fiction has long reserved a special place for its more contemplative moods; this is the space film. Little needs to be said of the two giants of the sci-fi cannon--Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey and Tarkovsky’s Solaris--other than, if you have not seen them, do. However there are also little gem’s kicking around this subset of the genre.

Sunshine, Danny Boyle’s 2007 film has been unfortunately overshadowed (excuse the pun) by the wild success of his most recent, Slumdog Millionaire. Sunshine is worth checking out, however, if only for Boyle’s spectacular rendering of stellar landscapes and solar ambiance. This film about a futuristic mission to restart our dying sun revels in both the star’s astronomical beauty and incendiary horror.

Interkosmos, Jim Finn’s 2006 musical mockumentary purports to tell the story of the Eastern Bloc’s failed attempt to carry the Communist Revolution to the stars. Mixing loving recreations of Soviet-era kitsch with actual archival telescopic footage, Interkosmos gives us a light satire of socialist utopian dreams and a playfully wry and experimental reinvigoration of the conventions of the outer-space movies we know so well.

Powers of Ten is directed by geniuses of American design, Ray and Charles Eames and it begins not far from Facets’ offices, hovering 10 meters above a couple picnicking on Chicago’s lakeshore. The camera then pulls away from the Earth at an exponentially greater rate, picturing the whole of the city, then the globe, Milky Way, and beyond. From this intergalactic vantage-point, the Eameses proceed to give us what must be the greatest zoom shot in the history of the cinema as we rocket back to earth and into the depths of inner space, finally stopping just outside the nucleus of a single carbon atom in the picnicker’s hand. Consisting of this one shot, Powers of Ten is a dizzying and dazzling little movie.

Blast! premieres at Facets Cinematheque, this Friday, September 25th and runs through Thursday, October 1st. For showtimes and tickets, click here.


-Heath Iverson

Friday, September 18, 2009

This Week at Facets! Sept. 18 - 24!

Facets Cinematheque is proud to present Lake Tahoe, the latest from Duck Season director Fernando Eimbcke, this week. This "droll charmer" (New York Post) takes viewers to the Yucatan peninsula to follow a teen's life-changing journey amongst the region's colorful characters.

"Nearly every shot is a joy -TimeOut NY
"Gorgeous, deceptively tranquil" -New York Times
"Original in concept, directed in a superbly precise manner, funny and simultaneously terribly sad" -FIPRESCI

Trailer!


Lake Tahoe runs from Friday, Sept. 18 - Thursday, Sept. 24!

And the worlds of sci-Fi and fashion meet this Saturday at Facets Night School's special session devoted to The Fifth Element!

Cary Elza puts Luc Besson's stylish sci-fi fave starring Bruce Willis and Milla Jovovich on the catwalk with her lecture, Earth, Wind, Fire, Water, and... Fashion?: Style vs. Substance in Besson's The Fifth Element.

Trailer!


Lecture, screening, discussion--only $5!! Saturday, Sept. 19th at MIDNIGHT!

For showtimes, tickets and additional info on all Cinematheque screenings, click here.

More Than Muscles

Facets Features writer Michelle Nelson finds unexpected beauty in JCVD (warning, thar be spoilers ahead)...


I don’t know anything about Jean Claude Van Damme.

Well, anything is a stretch. I know two things: he’s the muscles, and he’s from Brussels.

I’m too young to have experienced the Strong-Man action phase that Hollywood went through in the 1980’s and early 1990’s, so I missed out on his heyday. By the time I started paying attention, his movies had stopped running in theaters and were rehashes, basically, of long-winded action sequences from other movies, released straight to DVD where they found a market that kept him alive in pop culture.

After 2001, the landscape for film heroes in Hollywood changed. The general audience wasn’t willing to accept men like Stallone, Arnold or Van Damme as their saviors anymore. We turned instead to superheroes or completely average people overcoming odds. The Strong-man was viewed as cheesy and vapid: their movies to be taken out for spins at parties and watched with nothing but irony. Van Damme spent nine years in this purgatory as the butt of many jokes. And though I don’t know how bad it actually was, I feel justified in saying it was worth the wait for him to have JCVD as a comeback vehicle.

JCVD is a delicious story, fed to us in disjointed parts. We accept that Van Damme, like most actors who portray themselves in fictional works, isn’t being himself. He’s a character, but the line’s pretty thin.

Numerous wives and divorces, a kicked drug habit, poverty--all of these elements are present in both the actor’s personal and onscreen life. Van Damme doesn’t spend a lot of time developing his character here: we already know who he is. Instead, we’re immediately thrown into the setup of the plot and introduced to the idea that this movie moves quick.

The film is so hyper-aware that Van Damme is playing himself that it jumps around a lot, lobbing satire and criticisms in every direction. Nothing really sticks, however.

The media, fictionalized violence, bad fathers, and materialism all take obvious hits, as if the screenwriters were trying too hard. Characters speak in strange philosophical sentences, slipping between English and French with ease. This, apparently, is something Van Damme—the real Van Damme—is known for. The Belgian natives call it Zen Franglais. It doesn’t matter--only half of it works and only a fourth of it makes sense.

The editing and cinematography work with this disjoint to confuse us further. Giant pieces of information are cut out of dialog scenes—jumping into important conversations right before they end—while tons of violent developments and movements happen off screen as a lazy camera meanders about in a long take.

The high contrast lighting leaves the bright world outside overexposed and flaring, while keeping much of the inside action in shadows. The de-saturated colors make things hard to distinguish and flatten each image to let us know this is a manipulation of recorded frames. Suspension of disbelief is unnecessary because we’re not supposed to buy what’s happening. It doesn’t make sense right away, but there’s no doubt about it: the audience understands it’s watching a movie.

JCVD is not an action movie. For the first two thirds, it seems to be more about petty criminals.

Van Damme, having the worst day of his life, walks into a bank. We stay outside the building with a taxi driver, two shop owners and a police officer. Gun fire erupts from inside the bank. It appears as if Van Damme is robbing the place. But you know what they say about appearances.

The film has intense homages to Dog Day Afternoon—one of the moody criminals is dressed like a modernized version of John Cazale’s Sal. When the police decide that it’s Van Damme who’s holding the hostages and robbing the bank, hoards of people show-up at the crime scene ready for action. More than half the crowd openly mocks the police. They don’t scream “ATTICA,” but the mood is similar. The crowd sides with the celebrity.

Van Damme, the muscles, is overpowered by life at this point in the film: the director on his latest project thinks he’s stupid and hires Steven Seagal in his place; his ex-wife wins sole custody of their only child; the police think he’s the robber; the real perpetrators force him at gunpoint to do their bidding; he’s in debt and his friends and co-workers won’t bail him out. By the time Van Damme gets to the bank, he’s so immersed in self-pity and self-loathing that he caves to the robber’s scattered demands.

Once the cops establish the situation and set up a perimeter, the film takes a giant leap backwards and restarts the story from Van Damme’s point of view. We get pretty much everything this time—who the real criminals are, what they want and how violent they’re ready to become. But something is still missing.

About an hour into the movie, Van Damme sits in a chair at the bank. We’ve just wrapped up his POV segment. Suddenly, Van Damme’s floats upwards. He rises above the heads of his fellow hostages, over the desks and offices, over the set even. He turns to the camera and addresses us.

What starts out as biographical turns philosophical and becomes a beautiful speech that culminates with breathtaking simplicity.

“It’s so stupid to kill people…they’re so beautiful.” The speech doesn’t land the earlier criticisms the film made about media coverage or fictionalized and glorified violence, it brings the movie into focus.

The film up to this point gives answers before questions, but Van Damme’s speech serves as the turning point. He explains himself, “This movie is for me,” finishes, sinks back down to the bank and becomes the hero we expect him to be.

The last half hour is as perfect and wonderful as anything I’ve ever seen. It completes the narrative arc, and continues with the stylized constraints from the beginning. Van Damme kicks ass. But the ending is also about as far as can be from the standard action movie ending. It’s unmerciful and haunting because, in the world of artifice the filmmakers sucked us into, the final dose of reality seems cruel and unwarranted. But, once again, it doesn’t matter. This film, as it politely reminds us in many ways, wasn’t made for us. We should be glad we even get to see it.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

News Flash

Werner Herzog's Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans and Bong Joon-ho's Mother are among the selections at this year's AFI Fest.
-Variety

Did your high school days suck? Blame John Hughes. -Chicago Tribune

"Shades of Bacchus!" Joe Dante presented his fave W.C. Fields flick at TIFF. -Chicago Reader

Drool. Clips from Romero's new zombie flick, Survival of the Dead!
-BloodyDisgusting.com

Abbas Kiarostami, Park Chan-wook and Bruce Beresford are among the filmmakers with works in competition at the 2009 Asia Pacific Screen Awards. -PressTV.com

The first Iranian film shot in the US since 1979, In the Wind's Eye, directed by Masoud Jafari Jozani, is in production. -The Guardian

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

RIP Bodhi


Ride that fifty-year storm into eternity.

Monday, September 14, 2009

From Toronto: Part One

The two most-talked about films here at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival showed at the press and industry screenings Sunday.

Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story, which he apparently finished just days ago. Seeing it, you can understand why. It’s Moore’s most ambitious film, his “epic," so to speak, as it tries to embrace everything from what brought the US economic situation to its current state (in two words, uncontrolled greed) to putting a face on how the economy affects ordinary people--heart-wrenching episodes with people getting evicted from their homes after foreclosure. In one, a Peoria farm couple whose family had lived on the land for generations, but who fell behind in escalating mortgage payments because the husband was injured at work and is on disability is offered $1000 by the bank for emptying and cleaning their former house, including hauling all the trash to the dump.

There are typical Moore hijinks, with him wrapping yellow “Crime Scene” tape around Wall Street buildings, but in reality, he tries to put a face on the anger people feel from being ripped off by the system.

The Israeli film Lebanon, which just won a prize at the Venice Film Festival showed here to a packed house. It's a relentlessly claustrophobic drama of three soldiers in the close confines of a tank, during the invasion of Lebanon…


- Milos Stehlik

*Check back all week for more TIFF updates from Milos.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

The Times Discovers Women

Personally I think this is delusional - women are still on the OUT in the male-dominated film industry, and such grand journalistic pronouncements have been made before -- what about Jane Campion and The Piano for instance, which was supposed to usher in a new era of woman-centered (and directed/produced) cinema?


- Milos Stehlik

Friday, September 11, 2009

This Week at Facets Cinematheque! Sept. 11 - 17!

Facets is very excited to present the latest from notorious Austrian filmmaker Ulrich Seidl! Import/Export finds the director of Dog Days painting a formidable portrait of two lives struggling in modern Europe. Nominated for Cannes' Best Film prize!

"Absorbing" -Chicago Reader

"Powerful" -TimeOut Chicago

"Bizarre, horrifying, challenging, often brilliant and spectacular, often troubling and indeed objectionable. It is an example of Seidl's characteristic form of grotesque realism--part Diane Arbus, part Samuel Beckett" -The Guardian

"No film-maker has gone so far out on a limb to deliver us the hard news about the new Europe and its grubby economic realities. Forget all the puffed-up indie dabblers who fancy themselves as 'guerrilla' film-makers: Ulrich Seidl, like it or not, is the real thing" -The Independent

Find the trailer at the film's official site.

Import/Export
runs from Friday, Sept. 11-Thursday, Sept. 17.

And it's bell bottoms, Farrah hair, rock 'n' roll and juvenile delinquency galore on Saturday, September 12 at midnight as Facets Night School presents Cheap Tricks & Suburban Kicks: Re-Discovering a Lost Teen Classic--a special evening devoted to the Seventies teen drama, Over the Edge!

Facets' editor Phil Morehart digs into the wild film that took cinematic teen angst to destructive levels; launched the career of Matt Dillon; and enraptured Kurt Cobain. Lecture, screening, discussion--only $5!!

Rock it to the trailer!



For Cinematheque showtimes, tickets, additional info and more, click here.

Coming Next Week!
Lake Tahoe -"[A] droll charmer" (New York Post) and a Facets Night School session devoted to Luc Besson's The Fifth Element!

Friday, September 04, 2009

'Harold and Maude' Aging Gracefully

The Friday edition of the Chicago Tribune has an excellent article on Facets Night School's class on Hal Ashby's 1971 cult classic, Harold and Maude (being held Saturday, Sept. 5 at midnight--that's tomorrow!), including words from lecturer and Facets Features' blogger Dan Mucha. Read it here.

And while you're here, check out the trailer for Harold and Maude. If you haven't seen this lovely little film, tomorrow is your night. Dan has an excellent lecture planned. This promises to be a Night School great!



See you tomorrow at midnight!


- Phil Morehart

Conversation with an Ex-Doofus-ItchyFooted Mutha



Godfather of both independent and black cinema Melvin Van Peebles was interviewed by Rosie Perez on WNYC's The Leonard Lopate Show recently (Perez was sitting in for Leonard) and the results are pure joy.

Check our Van Peeble's latest, Confessions of a Ex-Doofus-Itchy Footed Mutha, at Facets Cinematheque this week.


- Phil Morehart

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Hal Ashby: A Legacy Renewed

Over 20 years after his death from cancer at age 59, the legacy and influence of editor-turned-director Hal Ashby has never been stronger. This summer saw both a star-studded, multi-generational Academy tribute in Los Angeles and the DVD release of a newly discovered “extended cut” of Ashby’s Lookin’ to Get Out, a film that came soon after what Peter Biskind referred to in his book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls as “the most remarkable run of any 70s director”: Harold and Maude, The Last Detail, Shampoo, Bound for Glory, Coming Home, and Being There.

It has been argued by Biskind and others that Ashby was never accorded the same due as his contemporaries because of a perception of Hal as a director who was only as strong as his source material and the talent of his collaborators. Two new books, Being Hal Ashby: Life of a Hollywood Rebel by Nick Dawson and The Films of Hal Ashby by Christopher Beach (available 9/22), do their best to fight this perception and also happen to be the only books yet devoted to Ashby. Rebel is a biography that finally tells the full story of Ashby’s unlikely journey from Ogden, Utah to Hollywood, while The Films of is a critical study focusing on his 70s output as it makes the case for Ashby as auteur.

In advance of Facets’ class on Harold and Maude this Saturday at midnight as part of our Night School series, I talked with not only Dawson and Beach about Ashby’s life and career but also with Lookin’ to Get Out’s lead actor and co-screenwriter Jon Voight, whose best-remembered collaboration with Ashby remains his Oscar-winning performance as wheelchair-bound Vietnam vet Luke Martin in Coming Home.

VOIGHT: [Hal] was this kind of resident editorial genius. He had received the Academy Award for doing In The Heat of the Night. He was kind of an eccentric genius—that's the way everybody thought about Hal.

DAWSON: I think he was a complete workaholic. If you look at his life, work was the thing that structured his life, that gave it order, that he could escape to. He would sleep on the floor of the editing room. He was between marriages and it was like he had nowhere else to go. The work was sort of his haven. When he became a director, he really excelled at it.

VOIGHT: When he made his decision to go into [directing] film, we were watching very carefully for him. Some people make the transition but many don't. Obviously he was a filmmaker from the start.

DAWSON: He was someone who worked incredibly hard but also knew how to fully involve people in his films, he really gave them room to express themselves. He was very sort of hands-off as a director, he always trusted his actors to sort of find the right way to approach things themselves. If they needed guidance, they would approach him and ask for help and he would give it.

VOIGHT: He presented himself in a very shy, soft-spoken way. He had a very strong personality and he was extremely knowledgeable about filmmaking. He never told you what to do - ever, he never told anybody what to do - but he would provide so much environment and information. And he did so much homework, so that whatever little subtle thoughts he expressed, they came from a certain depth and they would really hit their mark.

DAWSON: In the 80s [Ashby] ended up working on projects that were either not really his first choice or were compromised by the fact that other people basically wrecked them in post-production. I had heard that there was another version of Lookin’ that was Ashby’s cut. A friend of mine had seen it and told me that it existed. I was kind of keeping my eyes peeled for Lookin’, so when looking through the catalog for the UCLA Film and Television Archive, I noticed that they had two prints. One had six reels and one had seven reels. I was like, “Maybe one of these is longer.” And it turned out that right from the opening shot, this was a completely different movie.

VOIGHT: Discovering this version that [Hal] had subsequently cut, it was a bit of a treasure discovery for all of us. We got together and saw it recently and it was a very happy experience. Until I read Nick's book, I didn't know how much Hal was carrying, how much pressure was on him when he made the film and obviously that did affect us. But I must say it was always enjoyable to see Hal on the set in the morning and we had a good time shooting it, there was a lot of laughter. I was very pleased with the performances of Burt Young and Ann-Margret. I thought we were making a very strong piece, and then the piece came out and it was not successful because it wasn't finished by Hal.

BEACH: It's interesting that there were controversies with so many of Hal's films. I guess this makes sense, particularly since the last four films were not completed and/or edited by Ashby. It would be great to have a DVD release of 8 Million Ways to Die, for example, and include some of the footage that was shot but not used in the cut released by the studio.

DAWSON: I saw it as part of my brief as the person writing [my] book to recontextualize Ashby, to change the way that he was perceived. His legend has become very sort of simplistic, "the hippie director who was a drug addict who's career tanked in the 80s because he was wacked out on coke," and that's really not what happened at all.

BEACH: One thing that surprised me is the number of people I talk to who have seen his films but who don't know the name "Hal Ashby" or who don't know that he directed them. Perhaps the publication of Nick Dawson's bio and my book will help to change this.

DAWSON: I feel like in a way [Hal] was somebody who very much didn’t push himself forward, he didn’t promote the idea of himself as an auteur or as sort of the only architect of his films. He would rather talk about the films than his involvement with them. I feel like among his contemporaries he kind of didn’t sell himself the way a lot of them did. So what you’re left with after all of that is the work. This whole generation of filmmakers and film viewers who grew up seeing his films on TV, being shown Harold and Maude by their parents, they feel like they kind of discovered him in a sense and are managing now to piece together, “Oh, he’s the guy who did The Last Detail and he did Being There. Oh yeah, he did Shampoo. Oh, and he did Coming Home.” I think now is the time that he’s starting to have his comeback, in a weird way. His reputation is being restored to what it should have been.

VOIGHT: I think that he deserves it, it's nice to see that come forth. I'm very glad for the revival of interest. I think his work will be precious to us forevermore within the film legacy that we've been given. Certainly his great masterworks will be cherished forever and people will receive inspiration from looking at his pieces.


-Dan Mucha

(Study materials to be handed out at the class include the full texts of my interviews with Voight, Dawson, and Beach. One lucky audience member will receive a copy of Being Hal Ashby, courtesy of University Press of Kentucky).