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Anamon

A rejoint le févr. 2004
Well, I guess without message boards, there's not much point in being around anymore. It was good while it lasted. I can now mostly be found on Trakt, but will occasionally cross-post a review here if I feel it worthwhile. See you elsewhere, friends!
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Note de Anamon
Les Lumière de Berlin

Les Lumière de Berlin

6,8
  • 6 déc. 2024
  • Terrific on many levels

    I had the great privilege of watching this in a local theatre, with live musical accompaniment by score composer Laurent Petitgand, and followed by an in-person, audience Q&A session with Wim Wenders. This was on the occasion of Wenders being awarded the European Film Academy's lifetime achievement award.

    First of all, it's a pity that this film is not more widely known and appreciated, and is so hard to find. There were some DVD releases many years ago, which are long sold out. It's apparently available at some streaming service or other, but who really wants to trudge their way through the regional restrictions and DRM mess that these companies conjure up around the films? What I got to see yesterday is a remastered copy from 2023, with great picture quality and a new score (which, as I mentioned, was performed live at the showing). This gives me some hope that maybe a Blu-ray or UHD release might be in the works. I'll be first in line to get a copy, because the film is wonderful on so many levels.

    Some words on the background - maybe this is well-known, but I learned it from Wenders' talk yesterday. The film was initially a short-film project with students of the University of Television and Film in Munich, Wenders' alma mater. This makes up roughly the first third of the full movie, being a fictionalised retelling of the Skladanowsky story from the perspective of Max Skladanowsky's oldest daughter, recorded with a hand-cranked camera from 1922. Everyone involved in the project had so much fun that they revisited it a year later, and turned it into this feature-length film. Apart from wrapping up the Skladanowsky story by also covering the Wintergarten presentations and their ultimate defeat in the face of the Lumières' technologically superior system, a highlight is the interview snippets with Lucie Hürtgen-Skladanowsky, Max's youngest daughter, who, at the time of recording, was 91 years old, still living in her father's house in Berlin-Pankow, and turning out to be an endearing, feisty woman with a great presence of mind and fantastic memory of events reaching back into the 1920s. The film is worth watching for her scenes alone.

    The film works on so many levels. In its reenactments, it's a pretty authentic retelling, confirmed by daughter and niece Lucie, of the story of the Skladanowskys' development of the Bioscop film projector, their struggles, successes, and defeats. It's a story worth telling to anyone even remotely interested in the history of cinema, and makes a great case for the Germans' claim to innovation in the field along with the more widely-known French, British, and American innovators - even if the German system ended up being quickly replaced by its competitors'. In this footage, it's also an amusing comedy, with an authentic silent slapstick feel, because, in some way, it is authentic, having been recorded with period eqiupment and techniques. In its interview parts, it's a wonderful documentary based on the memories of a very fascinating and likeable contemporary witness. And, a level you sadly won't get when you watch this on the hopefully soon-to-be-available home video release of the remaster, it was especially amazing and touching to me to be able to see it in a way that was as close as I was likely to get to a Wintergarten-style show: in a public theatre, filled with other people interested in the art of cinema, and accompanied by live music (with Petitgand also using effects he sampled from a real theatre organ). This added a whole other meta level of excitement to the showing.

    Ultimately, it's also a tragic story, considering the Skladanowskys' lack of success with their inventions. Wenders mentioned that this was a major reason for why he wanted to make this film. He was very touched when learning the story of these inventive brothers. Wealthy industrialists like the Lumière brothers or Thomas Edisons used their considerable resources to professionally develop and market their new technologies, while the Skladanowskys were rather poor fairground showmen, and inventing in relative isolation. Given the circumstances, what they achieved is even more impressive. It's a heart-breaking story of renegade inventors who had the dream and almost got there, despite their lack of means, and even were at the very front of developments for a brutally brief moment in time. Wenders makes a good case that it might have been down just to a couple of minor coincidences that most history books talk of the world of cinema having started with the Lumière cinematographe, and not the Skladanowsky bioscope.

    I was initially a bit skeptical about how the mixture of documentary, reenactment, and imitation (using the 1920s camera) would work, but it turns out that the combination works just brilliantly and comes together very nicely. In retrospect, I don't know why I was even worried, given Wenders' track record. Who, by the way, came across as a very pleasant, down-to-earth, unpretentious person.

    All I can recommend is: definitely go see this if you get the chance.

    The March of Time: G-Men at War

    5,9
  • 6 oct. 2024
  • Interesting scenes of wartime counter-espionage

    The March of Time: G-Men Combat Saboteurs

    5,8
  • 4 oct. 2024
  • J. Edgar Hoover, our Lord and Saviour

    This installment of The March of Time is an almost unbearable adulation of J. Edgar Hoover, or, as he is reverentially and sycophantically called every minute or so, The Director. Going by this movie, benefactor Hoover is the one man who kept American society from collapsing into anarchy and violence. Permission to shoot in FBI offices, classrooms, and laboratories apparently came at a high price.

    At least that footage is quite interesting to watch today, even if most of what the agents are tinkering around with feels very staged. I assume the locations in the first part are authentic and we're seing some actual aspiring FBI agents. It's interesting to see their equipment, and the elements they focused on at the time. Of course, there's also the obligatory shot of Hoover looking important behind his desk.

    The fictional segment has a decent plot setup, but is lessened by poor acting, and the attempt to show off too many techniques within one investigation, which makes it a lot less believable than it could've been. Still, the interesting locations and good photography make it worth the 20-minute watch.

    This short is included on the Blu-ray release of "Walk East on Beacon".
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