Showing posts with label christos tsiolkas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christos tsiolkas. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

When Minds Are Blown #1

Credit where credit is due.

At different times in my life, I've encountered work (as probably many of us have, whatever field of life we stumble through) that has radically altered how I think about film and what I believe is possible both as a viewer and as someone who aspires to make the damn things. Sometimes it's just a single film that cracks the lid, and sometimes it's an entire body of work. Sometimes it comes from the usual suspects, whose works have blown minds over and over again, and sometimes it comes from unexpected quarters and surprising sources.

Exhibit A in the list of usual suspects. I offer up Bernardo Bertolucci. 


I was recently reminded of my early obsession with him while talking to a friend who is curating a retrospective of his films in Melbourne and was able to meet and spend time with BB in Venice recently. After a bout of insane star-fucking jealousy on my part, I thought back to two key films of his early work - both made in 1970, in a period of incredible productivity - that I watched back to back when I was 20 and which completely unravelled what I thought was possible for filmmakers to achieve in terms of the complexity of their ideas. These were films that contained an intricate density of narrative, with an oneiric layering of ideas, sensation and impossibly beautiful images; films that loosened the boundaries between idea and expression, and which embodied an inherently playful approach to the world outside of the film (especially as expressed in other texts - literature, cinema, psychoanalysis, political theory) and which were brimming with a visceral, sexualised expression of human desire and repression. The Conformist and Spider's Stratagem were the films. Buttressed between the unruly brilliance of Before the Revolution and Partner, and the grand mastery of Last Tango in Paris and Novecento, these two films became a turning point for me in realising that cinema is, if nothing else, an art of endless possibility. Filmmakers talk of limits but Bertolucci found ways to circumvent all limits. In these two films he allows a sequence to be visually staggering and a narrative lynchpin, while also serving as a moment of psychoanalytic severance, an unraveling of Plato, a reflection on his relationship with Godard, with Freud, with his poet father, or with the moral orthodoxies of the neo-realists; or he offers a scene as a demand that we view it's inversions and subversions in the context of the most challenging contemporary histories. The layers of interpretation throughout these films, within a coherent narrative, were, to my mind, staggering. And these films contain dozens of these endlessly re-interpretable sequences.

On top of this, what I also encountered, and what I loved equally, was that these films are sexy, wild, playful, beautiful, demanding, startling. They are not perfect films but, when I first encountered them, in all their flawed brilliance, they made cinema seem to me to be the perfect form.



Post script:

After writing this little love letter to the past, I started thinking out my plans for the retrospective and mulling over the schedule and noticed that there was an accompanying essay to the retrospective written by bloody Christos Tsiolkas who sits in the next bloody desk over from me and who had not once mentioned that he'd written this beautiful and far more articulate essay of adoration. Read it... It's a beautiful thing.

"We need to come to it, as we need to come to all of Bertolucci's work, acknowledging that we are thinking, active, ethical beings, that we come to cinema with ideas and dreams we seek to explore and to think through and to challenge."
Christos Tsiolkas

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Songs that Should Be Films #4

In earlier blogs, I've written my lists of Songs That Should Be Films. There's one here. One here. And another here. What's the point? Maybe the point is that embodied in a perfect four or five minute song is enough emotion and narrative and dynamism and complexity to sustain a feature length film. God knows a lot filmmakers could take some notes on light and shade, structure and depth from good songs and great songwriters.

Two Cents. Mine.

As we're currently running the rounds of the media traps at the moment with a film about protest songs, tonight I am going on the freaking great Superfluity radio show (on RRR) hosted by a dear friend, the absurdly brilliant literary and intellectual heavyweight Christos Tsiolkas, and two other damned fine hosting folks, Casey Bennetto and Scott Edgar. It's a two hour spot from 8-10pm of conversations and songs that riff off or emerge from the last song played and the conversation as it evolves. No pre planned playlists. I am guessing part of what we'll be doing is talking about the songs in 'murundak - songs of freedom', protest and folk song traditions, but as the nature of the show demands, it will also be free ranging and, hopefully, satisfy my secret radio host fantasies.

I hosted a couple of radio shows at high school. The first one was in Yr 10 and, along with some pals, Tiy Chung and Nicola Dracoulis (now a kick-arse photographer), we played straight up golden era hip hop (well, it was the golden era, it wasn't a conscious choice), repeating Jungle Brothers 'Doin Our Own Dang', Tribe Called Quest's 'I Left My Wallet In El Segundo' and Boogie Down Productions' 'Jack of Spades' over and over again. Then, in Year 11 and 12, I used to embarrass myself and everyone else in the college common room by playing the same handful of angry protest songs - mostly political hip hop and agit punk (and, strangely, probably because I was a dreary teenager, I used to start every show (7.30 am in the empty school grounds) with The Cure's Plainsong (you know the one with the wind chimes and the wrist slitting romanticism?).

In my late teens, I then briefly hosted a show on community radio. I desperately wanted to get the gig doing Velvet Nights (music influenced by Velvet Underground which I assumed if I actually played and understood it at 18 would lead me straight to girls and rock'n'roll hair) but I made the mistake of listening back to my first and only show recording and realised I sniffed between every second word and sounded like a stuffed up toddler. Besides which, the uber cool Pip Branson from Sidewinder hosted the show and I had no chance of taking his spot. I gave up on radio, community and otherwise, never to return... until now!

So, tonight is my chance to redeem myself. I expect nothing less than glory.

And with that in mind and without any real segue, here are the lyrics to Fugazi's song Cassavetes, the perfect synthesis of music, protest and cinema.
"Crush my calm you Cassavetes
I was sitting tight so quiet quiet
In the dark till the lights came up my heart
Beating like a riot riot
Hollywood are you sitting on a sign
For someone to come on bust a genre
You poor city of shame
Ask me what you're needing
I'll sell you his name
cos he was the one to send it with truth
That's something from someone
And Gena Rowlands complete control for Cassavetes
If it's not for sale you can't buy it buy it
Sad-eyed mogul reaching for your wallet
Like hand to holster why don't you try it try it
Hollywood are you waiting on a sign
For someone to come on bust a genre
You poor city of shame
Ask me what you're needing
I'll front you his name
cos he was the one to send it with truth
that's something from someone and Gena Rowlands"

words/lyrics/awesomeness: Fugazi

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Felllow Travellers #3

Another great piece on SlowTV from the Sydney Writer's Festival last month. This time with Christos Tsiolkas talking about the role of music in his writing.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

On Time

'samson and delilah' at cannes.
'the slap' wins christos tsiolkas the commonwealth writers prize.
new Australian films in the pipeline by filmmakers who know they need to provoke, push and strive for audacity.
will this be a new time?