Entries tagged with “New York City” from Rooftop Films Blog




NYUFF_Valdez.jpgNew York Underground Film Festival
April 2-8, 2008
@ Anthology Film Archives
www.nyuff.com
Tickets

March 27 @ 9:45pm
Selections from the 2007 NYUFF

@ IFC Center
Tickets



The New York Underground Film Festival, a venerable anti-establishmentarian institution, the godfather of all "Underground" film festivals, will be hosting its 15th and Final installation in April, and then doing what any good punk rocker should do: dying young and . . . re-establishing itself as year-round programming consortium called "Migrating Forms."

The NYUFF has always been a haven for strange and beautiful, shocking and revealing avant garde cinema, and is definitely a big inspiration for Rooftop. I'll certainly be out for many screenings, including films by the following Rooftop alums: Jim Finn, Jacqueline Goss, Patrick Jolley, Jeanne Liotta, Jennifer Matotek, Seth Price, Robert Todd, Keith Wilson, Bryan Boyce, Lyn Elliot, Kent Lambert, Darrin Martin, Eileen Maxson, Kelly Oliver, Keary Rosen, Shelly Silver, Jim Trainor, Cory Arcangel, Skizz Cyzyk, Joe Nanashe, Moira Tierney, and Aaron Valdez (film pictured).

Check back here to the Rooftop Films blog for some write-ups and reviews of films, and I hope to see you there!

PleasureRobbed3.jpgThe pleasure of "The Pleasure of Being Robbed" is the joy of discovering a bag full of kittens (and watching them playfully flip through the air); the bliss of an unexpected overnight road trip with a friend; the warmth of a frolic with a polar bear. Josh Safdie's film is filled with a carefree awkwardness, a lightness of touch with melancholy and humor, and a whole host of unexpected stolen delights. I am a big fan of Josh's short film "The Back of Her Head," which we screened at Rooftop in August of 2007, and his debut feature carries the emotions, ideas and spirit of his short films to a brilliant pinnacle.

The film follows a young lady as she drifts through life with the naïve charm of curious puppy, who takes whatever she wants, and with the detachment of an adorable kitten, who cares not a fig what you think of her. But Eleonore is neither greedy nor simple. She is constantly stealing, but does so exuding a joy in sharing objects, stories, lives. She steals with a hug, with a shared joke, with a helping hand. The real world does intrude on her beatific kleptomania, and one doesn't get the sense that people do always understand and appreciate what she does, but as the description of the film says, the people from whom she steals "owe her their thanks."

PleasureRobbed2.jpgCertainly we all owe a tremendous thanks to Safdie, actress Eleonore Hendricks, and the entire crew of the utterly dazzling Red Bucket Films team for creating this magical piece of cinema.

Amazingly, the film itself was somewhat stolen. The filmmakers had been commissioned to make a commercial, but instead used the money to make this gorgeous film, reminiscent of the best of the free-wheeling late-60s / early-70s American cinema.

When asked at the World Premiere Q & A why Josh was so interested in the idea of stealing, Safdie compared the feeling he got when he would steal as a kid to that of being in love, and being compelled to do irrational, illicit things for your lover. Might the creation of this character be seen as celebrating mental illness, one viewer asked. "Well, if mental illness is doing whatever you want all the time, then yes, I'll celebrate that."


One of the most beautiful shows Rooftop Films ever hosted was our 2007 edition of Dark 'Toons. The astonishing animator Brent Green showed his films and played live music with Brooklyn locals The Quavers. They are a band whose sound and focus is very much in line with Rooftop--quiet and surprisingly intricate songs about drifting through specific landscapes. I'm a huge fan, and hope to have them back on the roof again.

Vincent Moon on Blogotheque's "Take Away Shows" created a wonderful video with the Quavers playing two songs while floating down the Gowanus Canal (just one block away from Rooftop headquarters). I think it's a fantastic and perfectly executed idea (having Brooklyn indie film legend Jem Cohen piloting the boat adds to the mystique). Watch the video (below) and read the exciting story here.

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THE QUAVERS - Sea Won't Take Long
by lablogotheque

Props to Rooftop's Managing Director Genevieve DeLaurier for digging up this video.

In 11 years, Rooftop has now shown over 1,400 films. Casimir Nozkowski has shown about a dozen, more films than anyone else (or at least the 2nd most; Steve Collins has also shown about that many--statistics from the early days are a little hazy. Historians are arguing over original program note documents now stored at the National Archives.)

One of the reasons Cas is so successful is because he can make a smart, sweet, savvy film with very few resources. His work typifies the Rooftop attitude: a good idea, a simple execution, a unique movie.

His most recent work is a potential New York Non-Fiction candidate, a subtle and fun anthropomorphizing of some bottles on the subway. I'd love to hear what people's thoughts are on this, because I found it alternating touching, inspiring, funny and melancholy.



The song in it is "The Dance Went On Too Long" by The Chief Smiles. Cas writes, "This was not sanctioned by the MTA. Or Snapple. Or many strangers on the subways."

FilmSubversiveArt.jpgTUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 8PM
Rooftop Films & Stranger Than Fiction co-present
"Film as a Subversive Art: Amos Vogel and Cinema 16"
a feature-length documentary by Paul Cronin
at The IFC Center | Tickets

We at Rooftop Films are proud to be co-presenting this film because we certainly consider ourselves descendents of Amos Vogel's Cinema 16. I think one of the great legacies of Vogel's work was the way he and his compatriots placed a great social and moral significance on independent and experimental cinema. They recognized the power of motion pictures, and used film to challenge people's aesthetics, their values, their ways of thinking. This is something that we've always tried to do at Rooftop as well. And much the way that Cinema 16 was famous for showing varied programs short films, at Rooftop we also like to mix genres, styles and voices, programming around a central theme to encourage people to see new and unexpected films.

I know that Vogel wrote about the importance of the total immersion in the theater-going experience, so I hope he would approve of Rooftop's outdoor model. I think the key to Rooftop's success is that we get people to engage with cinema beyond the theater. They are watching films relevant to the very communities they are sitting in, which we hope gets them to engage with the issues and ideas presented in the film. I'm eager to ask Amos if he has any thoughts about Rooftop.

The bottom line is that Cinema 16, Rooftop Films and Stranger Than Fiction are all vital to the cultural dialogue in New York because we get people to come out to see challenging films they otherwise wouldn't see. So it's a thrill for us to all be working together on this presentation, and we hope you all come out and enjoy Paul Cronin's documentary "Film as a Subversive Art: Amos Vogel and Cinema 16."

manonwire_filmstill4-SMALL.jpgIn 1974, Philippe Petit committed one of the world's greatest "art crimes": walking across a tightrope strung between the then unfinished World Trade Center towers. It's a gorgeously ephemeral stunt. Walking some 1,200 feet above the street, Petit was barely visible, and might not have been noticed if not for his own assistants looking up (and shouting with joy). And the very nature of the stunt is marvelous for it's delicacy and subtlety--walking gently on a rope--magnified by the extreme height and the impending iconic status of the buildings. When he came down, arrested by police officers who recognized the wondrous singularity of what they had just seen, he was asked repeatedly: Why? "It's such an American question," Petit says. "I have done something extraordinarily beautiful. There is no why."

[All quotations are paraphrases to the best of my memory and notes.]

James Marsh's inspiring documentary "Man On Wire" tells Petit's story from his early days as an aspiring performer of circus arts, through his wire walks between the towers of Notre Dame and across the Sydney Harbor Bridge, and up through the lengthy planning and execution of his famous WTC walk. There is marvelous footage and photos from the early walks, but only still photos exist of the walk in NYC (I've heard contradicting reports about the cameraman's hands being too tired from hauling the wire, and about the cameraman having to flee arrest before being able to film.) Yet in spite of this lack of footage, the still photos are truly gorgeous, and lend a mythical quality to the event. The film plays out with marvelous tension and drama, not unlike a bank robbery. In part the drama comes from the complexity of the operation: the practice, the trial runs, the planning, the costumes, the sneaking around guards with hundreds of pounds of equipment. With a tight team working stealthily, overnight, on a deadline, recounting the fascinating details of the story is mesmerizing.

But moreover the drama comes from the glorious sense of destiny Petit was aiming to fulfill. He tells us, in the film, that from the time he was a teenager, when he first saw an architect's rendering of the towers, he knew he had to walk between them, to do something impossible and beautiful, something that was against the law, but not wicked or mean. Petit was so taken with that initial photo of the towers that he ducked out of a dentist's appointment, "And so I still had a tooth ache, but what is a little pain compared to finally having my dream? Only the towers weren't built, so the object of my dream did not even exist."

manonwire_filmstill2-SMALL.jpgHe had to wait years for the opportunity to fulfill his dream, and Petit's passion and energy are so palpable that, as I said, the tension is enthralling as we hear him and his team recount the tale. He knew the walk was tremendously dangerous, but was thrilled and calmed by the idea that he might "die in the exercise of one's passion."

Petit was just as charming and inspiring in real life, at the Q & A following the film's premiere. When asked how he financed his stunt, he said, "I'm sorry, I don't know what money is. And anyway, this was illegal; it doesn't cost anything to rob a bank." Also in the Q & A, he told us that he knew that his mission would be a success when he came to America and was stopped twice at customs. The first time, he had a suitcase full wire-walking equipment, but also items for magic tricks. The customs agent pulled Petit aside to search his bag, and Philippe was worried that he would get in trouble. But, in front of a long line of impatient people waiting for their flight, the customs agent pulled out the deck of cards, and asked Philippe to choose one. That the agent was trying his hand at magic instead of enforcing security made Philippe fall in love with America. Then, on his second trip, when he had all his equipment for the wirewalk, the customs agent asked him what he was going to do with all this stuff. Not knowing what to say, Petit tried honesty: "'I'm going to walk between the towers of the World Trade Center,' I told him. And he laughed so hard and said, 'Yeah, right, good luck," and let me through."

Petit turned more serious when asked about how the events of September 11th affected him. "The towers were more than my friends, they were inside of me. I fell in love with them when they were born, when they came of age I married them. So when they fell, it felt like a part of me had died. Of course, it doesn't sound right to say that when in fact so many people died that day. But I feel proud to have made that walk, and to have this film, so that the towers and all the people can be remembered with sadness, but also with joy and beauty and laughter."

"Man on Wire" has indeed created exactly that, a poetic memorial and a stirring legend, and I hope that we can bring this film, fittingly, to the Rooftop.

FBRattle.jpg
Yesterday was travel day for Mark and Gen and today is travel day for me, so I figured this was a good time for a short blogging break from Sundance talk and ruminations on terminal coffee sponsorships. Last week, Mark and I checked out a special work in progress sneak preview of Full Battle Rattle at Thom Powers' Stranger Than Fiction series and we both loved the films. Co-Directed by Jesse Moss (who directed the super-fun festival hit doc Speedo, which has nothing to do with bathing suits) and Tony Gerber, Full Battle Rattle is about life inside the US Army's Iraq simulation in California's Mojave Desert from the perspective of the Iraqi-American civilians who work there as "role players" and the US soldiers who train there. I'll write more about it later, but for now I'll just say I found it really fascinating and surprisingly thoughtful, insightful and understated for a film with so much (simulated) violence and action. They edited back at our home base in the Old American Can Factory, making it the 3rd hot new doc to come out of our Gowanus compound in as many years (King Corn was also edited at the Factory, as was Carl Deal and Tia Lessin and which premieres at Sundance in a couple of days--thanks to Mark for reminding me). No New York premiere announced yet for Full Battle, but who knows what might happen...?


Josh Safdie and Red Bucket Films, the makers of a bunch of charming films about quirky urban fairy tales and curious encounters (including The Back of Her Head, Rooftop 8/11/07), have a new vignette about two adorable kids unsatisfied with their frighteningly metallic Christmas tree. They go off in search of a real, old-fashioned tree, encountering some typical New York gruffness and some of that unexpected generosity which makes NYC so special year round.

And, by the way, props to the Times for recognizing these low-budget native New Yorker filmmakers as the true bearers of authentic urban holiday spirit.

Also on Sale on DVD

With so many film-watching options available these days (films playing for one week only, movies On Demand, on DVD, on the web), it's hard to get excited about going to the cinema. For 11 years now, Rooftop Films has been finding ways to make movie-going an exciting communal event again. We combine live music with unique outdoor spaces and show fantastic films, creating memorable experiences for audiences and filmmakers alike. I'm really excited that other filmmakers are coming up with their own creative ways to entice and energize large crowds of movie-goers.

Most recently, Paul Lovelace and Sam Wainwright Douglas, the directors of a wonderful doc called "Holy Modal Rounders...Bound To Lose," have made a festival out of their New York Theatrical premiere, with screening events all week long at the Anthology Film Archives packed with live musical performances, keynote introductions, and free drinks. The hard-work and commitment to putting on a great show is worth supporting.

Furthermore, "Bound to Lose" is a delightful film about the most laid-back, agro-psychedelic pre-punk druggie band you ever saw. Sam and Paul brilliantly capture the strange and shifting dynamic between Peter Stampfel and Steve Weber, the band's two main progenitors for over 30 years (early members also included Sam Shepard). Stampfel and Weber are contentious but needy, bickering but collaborative, working in the most roundabout way in music history to create some beautifully bizarre music, all while their lives teeter like a runaway wagon on two wheels.

So if you don't get a chance to be part of the spectacular show at the Anthology, certainly buy the film on DVD. 

PS: Sam also co-produced and edited "Dan Asher: Near Life Experience," which we screened at Rooftop in September 2007. Directed by Stephanie Schwam, it's a lovely portrait of a truly amazing artist, and worth seeking out. 

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