Wednesday, June 24, 2009
NYAFF in town!!!
There are a few films that stand-out for me and I will be doing my best to see them.
--Rough Cut
--Breathless
--Yoroi Samurai Zombie
-- Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl
--Plastic City
--Pink films (I'm particularly interested in the pink film that is based (loosely) off of Teorema)
--Written By
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
The Humanism of Jia Zhang-Ke
We got it. The world economy is in meltdown mode, my inheritance disintegrated overnight, and everything, from cabdrivers to llamas’ know why. There are more Monday morning quarterback’s than I can count and if I hear Ralph Nader say ‘I told you so’ one more time I’m gonna go popeye on his ass. Amidst the cacophony of nonsense, a lone voice has appealed to my own disposition-Jia Zhang-ke. In his prior films The World and Still Life, and in his most recent film 24 City, Jia Zhang-ke artfully examines
Zhang-Ke’s films don’t only give a voice to the voiceless, they suggest a certain prescription for our current woes---humanism. Throughout 24 City Zhang-ke shows that in the move towards capitalism, and the money oriented conception of human relations that follows, we all lose track of human feelings like compassion, connection, and empathy. Our relationships with one another lose their unique human quality. Emotions like empathy, compassion, and caring are replaced by concerns about utility. It doesn’t matter what you produce, it matters how you produce (what’s your overhead). There are no variables for ‘effect on human lives’ in the complex algorithims that are employed by companies to maximize profit. Human’s rather than using tools to create, have become the tools themselves. This may sound like a bunch of neo-marxist mumbo jumbo but there are human’s out there that are experiencing just this. And with 24 City you don’t need to go any further than your local multiplex to see them.