Monday, 30 June 2025

IN PARIS - The return of Bo Widerberg - ADALEN '31 (Sweden, 1969)


The beloved cinema the Reflet Medicis on rue Champollion  always seems to deliver one trick. No matter what I might go to see on one or other of its screens I always manage to choose one which involves a lot of stairs down to and up from its subterranean high-ceilinged Cinema 1. The same goes for the nearby Champo, though there are less stairs to traverse. Just saying...

But it was to the Reflet Medicis and its dreaded Cinema 1 that I headed to renew an acquaintance with Bo Widerberg, one time  darling of the international festival and art house circuit. His Elvira Madigan  set the box office alight way back in 1967, the culmination of a series of films all made with the actor Thommy Berggren.

Bo Widerberg may be officially back on the screen judging by the excellent promotional leaflet picked up at the theatre. Five of his films The Baby Carriage, Raven's End, Love 65, Elvira Madigan and Adalen '31 are screening in Paris along with a feature documentary Being Bo Widerberg. The season would seem to be popular given that at a mid-afternoon  session of Adalen '31 there looked like somewhere  between 50 and 60 people in the house. 

The copy of Adalen '31 was superb, apparently a 4K restoration by the Swedish Film Institute. The story of a small town strike during the depression. The bosses at the local industrial plants wanted to reduce wages. The workers took exception and organised a very large protest. They marched towards the plant and there were met by the army who opened up on them with rifles and a machine gun, killing five and wounding many. Not a million miles away from things that still happen today.


Widerberg was an anti-Bergman director. He was dismissive of Bergman's fanciful ruminations on god and was unimpressed by the theatricality. That's about all I'm remembering from the day. Widerberg took his inspiration from Italian neo-realism  and the French New Wave.

The story of the days and weeks of the strike are told through the eyes of one family. Mother, father and three sons, one of whom engages in a summer romance with a visiting girl which leads to lots of complications.

It remains a very gripping tale...and I suspect there would be some continuing fascination for those early films and for the remarkable Thommy Berggren who was in most of them but not Adalen 31. I imagine Widerberg wanted anonymity for his cast in that film. Berggren came back a year or so later to play the title character in the splendid Joe Hill, also restored by the Swedish Film Institute.

Saturday, 28 June 2025

AT IL CINEMA RITROVATO - Noir and its iterations and abuses.....

Eight O'Clock Sharp/På slaget åtte (Nils R. Muller, Norway, 1957)

A much anticipated strand of the Ritrovato selection was that devoted to so-called Nordern Noir - "the cinematic forerunners of today's popular Nordic noir TV series". ..whoa...hold on a minute... expert advice called for here and where is Rod Bishop when needed... Well I do have to hand Rod's words in the Cinema Reborn 2025 catalogue and its website: "Born at the start of World War II, film noir mixed up numerous influences, including German expressionism and hard-boiled American crime fiction. As disillusioned war veterans returned home, their bitter experiences helped to propel noir’s fatalist, doom-laden view of life, until 1958 when noir concluded with Touch of Evil. Filmmaker Paul Schrader called it ‘film noir’s epitaph’.  

"Noir’s uniqueness lay in its bracing antidote to the feel-good/happy endings of Hollywood films during the 1940s and 1950s. It is often mistakenly called a genre – like rom-coms, westerns, science fiction or horror. Noir is a film movement, like German expressionism, Italian neorealism and the French New Wave, with agreed-upon historical periods and starting and ending dates. Like other film movements, noir films share thematic narratives, societal issues and artistic flourishes while often challenging the conventional filmmaking practices of the day." 

"Noir" is a much-abused and exploited term these days. For quite a while critics, but even more so, programmers, curators and fans have used the easy shorthand of "noir" as an apparent selling point of just about any film where someone gets killed. It's been going on for quite a while. I remember a couple of retrospectives that Quentin Turnour programmed for the Sydney Film Festival dubbed "Nikkatsu Noir" and "Brit Noir" respectively. I think Quentin's selection instructions went only as far as saying just be aware that this season is going to be dubbed 'noir'.

Bologna  offered us a stream denoted Nordern Noir which proved to be....well...not noir but rather a series of mysteries, melodramas and crime stories. They weren't entirely devoid of interest but they were not the real thing, not an undiscovered river of cinematic gold.



Tuesday, 24 June 2025

IL CINEMA RITROVATO - Max Ophuls, Lewis Milestone, Francois Leterrier, Ciro Duran.


Max Ophuls began his feature film career directing a modest comedy called Die Verliebte Firma/The Company's in Love in 1932. Somewhat strikingly, but perhaps showing Max's self-confidence, it's a comedy about film-making with much satirical material about how movies get made. So many people wanted a ticket to it that Il Cinema Ritrovato wouldn't accept bookings and made most of those who wanted to see it queue up in the Last Minute Line. 

The leads were well-known actors of the day. The lead female Anny Ahlers (above right) had star all over her performance. She is substituted into the film within a film when the then star finally bickers and walks out once too often. When she is finally tracked down and brought into the production there are  a series of moments, which in later years Max would have directed in a series of fluid tracking shots from room to room as each of the principals attempts to get her alone, and each no doubt has quite nefarious purposes in doing so. Mordant jokes about the casting couch weren't common in 1932. 

There are only 67 minutes of the film remaining, with at least seven minutes or so not located. The Murnau Institute has managed to put it back together, including incorporating material with different aspect ratios. 

Still Il Cinema Ritrovato can have moments that set you back a bit. I doubt I have ever seen anything as mediocre as La Paga, a 61 minute film by Ciro Duran from Colombia/Venezuela chronicling the life of an exploited peasant in the Andes. The film had already screened at this year's Cannes Classics and it's described as "a pioneering work of Latin American social and political cinema". Worthy perhaps but that doesn't say much about filming itself - the staging, the acting, the longueurs, the heavy emphasis..Still as with almost everything screened here it got some sort of good reception.

It was followed by a Warner Bros movie of the first order, Lewis Milestone's film of the Norwegian WW2 resistance, Edge of Darkness (1943). Robert Rossen's script is a long and complicated story whereby all of the locals, bar fish factory owner/collaborator Kaspar Torgersen finally unite in common purpose. Errol Flynn speaks with his perfect mid-Pacific accent throughout. An Australian connection was added to by Judith Anderson as a stern resistance leader and with Orry-Kelly's costumes ...just saying.

Simone Signoret, Reginald Kernan, Le Mauvais Coups

Finally I had to wonder what possesses a seemingly rational company, in the case the French major Pathe, to restore a film like Francois Leterrier's Les Mauvais Coups/Naked Autumn from 1961. This is a film with several sequences where the two lead characters go out hunting to kill birds. OK. Not a solitary occurrence. You only need to recall La Regle du Jeu and its hunting scene. But this film contains one sequence where clearly a bird is wounded and is pursued by its hunter who keeps firing and finally gets the bird, which is still moving, and in full view clubs it to death. Things have moved on folks.

Monday, 23 June 2025

IL CINEMA RITROVATO - Frank Borzage, Katharine Hepburn, Lewis Milestone, David lean

"Can you tell me what are those badges are you are wearing? We've had a lot of people through today with them." Said the waitress at the rather nice restaurant Va Mo La, way down near the  university as we sat down for dinner. She said it in perfect English too. So we explained about our accreditation lanyards for Il Cinema Ritrovato  and she said "Ah yes I saw Close Encounters of the Third Kind in the Piazza Maggiore last night. Spielberg is one of my favourite directors" A cinephile waitress no less. "Who is your favourite?" "Maybe Ettore Scola. I saw lots of his films with my parents on TV." Wow.... "Who else do you like?" "I like Toto" ...."And Alberto Sordi?" One of us prompted. "Oh yes. He's Roman and so am I"

Local favourite Ettore Scola

Not sure you'd have that conversation in Sydney...

But you may get a chance to see classic Hollywood... Till We Meet Again (Frank Borzage, 1944) has been given a magnificent makeover by Universal and the packed house loved every second of it, notwithstanding rather a lot of religious sentimentality and a continuing subtext about the obligations placed on those who serve the Lord not to lie. It's not an obligation always honoured, as the case of George Pell and his accompanying miscreants demonstrated, but here it's the foundation of a story of trust and betrayal involving Ray Milland as a shot down airman trying to get back home and of course carrying  documents that will win the war. Borzage had a great feel for war movies about trust and this one, while not in the same class as his masterpiece, Three Comrades, digs into the subject with a lot of grip.

Barbara Britton, Ray Milland, Till We Meet Again

Not sure Hollywood covered itself with glory with Lewis Milestone's Rain, restored but also restoring all the censorship cuts made after the Code came to be enforced (and on view in the YouTube and public domain copies that have been all we had to rely upon). Farran Smith Nehme's intro tried to sell us on the idea that this was a much better film than most people thought but I think I'm in the most people camp.

Katharine Hepburn, Rossano Brazzi, Summertime

Then there was a 35mm print of Summertime,  the only David Lean film which had eluded me, despite countless showings late night on the ABC over the years. It was part of Molly Haskell's Hepburn strand and although Molly didn't do an intro for this one, she has battled out lots of others despite taking a tumble on Bologna's cobblestones on the day of her arrival. Hepburn's Akron Ohio 45 year-old spinster being wooed by a supersmooth Rossano Brazzi on her first, likely only, trip to Venice has a timeless fascination. She acts every scene and it made me wonder if Lean had any control of her...Brazzi is mostly almost immobile but delivers his lines brilliantly. The fireworks display may have passed muster as a metaphor back in the 50s but it looks a bit quaint. I headed into the theatre having inadvertently found myself walking and chatting with Ian Christie. Ian's view was that I was in for a treat and that Lean had been given a hard time of it back in the sixties, the pack being lead by Andrew Sarris and the boys from "Movie". Ian was heading off to see a silent version of Les Miserables...


Saturday, 21 June 2025

AT IL CINEMA RITROVATO - Lowell Sherman's THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR THEM (USA, 1931) and more

Lowell Sherman & Ina Claire, The Greeks Had a Word for Them

Not having access at the moment to Andrew Sarris's book American Cinema I cant off the top of my head recall whether Lowell Sherman was grouped under Expressive Esoterica or Oddities and One Shots. Whatever, he was down among the also ran categories, a minor figure with some qualities that compared him to Lubitsch. His brief period of prominence coincided with pre-Code freedom and in The Greeks Had a Word for Them he used 79 rapid fire minutes to exploit it  to the hilt.  

The presenter, someone from the Library of Congress I think, didn't go very far into this specialist discussion but she did ask for a show of hands as to whom in the audience had not seen The Greeks Had a Word for Them.  A forest of hands, including mine, was raised.  According to Wikipedia Sarris, described Lowell Sherman's direction as having a "civilized sensibility" that was "ahead of its time." He also noted the "sophistication of his sexual humour" as being "notably free of malice"

Whatever, The Greeks Had a Word for Them  is a raucous comedy about three young women looking for men who will provide them with a lifestyle to which they would like to become accustomed. The women swap partners, bicker and compete but ultimately, sentimentally, go for gender solidarity over the attractions of catching rich husbands. Towards this end the farce gets ever more frenetic...The crowd loved it, especially I suspect those who had never seen not merely it, but quite likely the likes of it. It may be among the most vulgar pre-code manifestations of what Hollywood got away with before the wet blanket and blue stocking enforcers of the Hays Code got to have their way and stifled American film-making for a generation. Needless to say at least for me it's the hit of the season thus far...

I must confess that what the Greeks had a word for remains mysterious to viewers which may be why the title of the film was changed to Three Broadway Girls for subsequent bowdlerised releases. Sherman's sophisticated film-making did not get much more opportunity. He died of pneumonia in 1934.

My morning started with Dorothy Arzner's Christopher Strong, continued with Jocelyne Saab's 1985 Lebanese/French Ghazl El-Banat/ The Razor's Edge through to an unknown Spanish film from 1957 El inquilino/The Tenant (Jose Antonio Nieves Conde), a comedy about the housing shortage which in the light of recent events at the Sydney Film Festival had a ring of familiarity.

Fernando Fernan Gomez, Maria Rosa, Salgado
The Tenant

That film, while more than a bit of plod through its story, did have one notable feature, a concluding "Appendix" which detailed all of the censor cuts and edits made to the film after some thin-skinned bureaucrat at the Department of Housing saw it during its first run and went to war demanding changes that were designed to eliminate any criticism of the Fascist Franco Government of the day. The film was withdrawn, hacked to pieces and re-released to general indifference. Its new fantasy happy ending was of course totally unconvincing given the realist story line and setting of the original.


Friday, 20 June 2025

IL CINEMA RITROVATO - Pre-festival screenings slowly slip the event into gear...

Laurel & Hardy in Two Tars 

Il Cinema Ritrovato slowly slipped into gear since last Monday with some screenings at the remarkable Modernissimo Cinema If you had been in Bologna since Monday you could have seen among others King Vidor's The Big Parade, Ernst Lubitsch's One Hour With You, Lewis Milestone's Of Mice and Men and Luigi Comencini's Il Tempo Che Ci Vuole and evening screenings in the Piazza Maggiore of Comencini's Le Avventure di Pinocchio, David Cronenberg's A History of Violence and George Stevens' Woman of the Year. 

Yesterday they kicked off the selection from 1905 with a dozen short films. It was introduced, at length in Italian by Mariann Lewinsky and in English by Karl Wratschko. Karl let us know they had watched 'every film made in 1905' to make the selection and in case you think that was daunting, if they had decided to screen everything made that year it would take less than a day to get through them. The first program devoted to he strand Cinema in 1905, was focused on actualities, a little violent slapstick comedy (Les Farces de Toto Gate-Sauce), and a recording of a steeplechase horse race. That film, all seven minutes of it, clearly (from the varying numbers of horses approaching each fence) was an amalgam of the races of the day but did include four actors pretending to respond to various events. In a way that reminds us that the very first film made in Australia, The 1896 Melbourne Cup, featured not merely the first recording of the day but also the first acting performances and staging of scenes in an Australian movie. (That occurs when a man rushes into shot waving his hat and suddenly the crowd pick up his cue and wave theirs as well.)

That program was rounded out by a restored 1928 Laurel & Hardy Two Tars, part of a concerted effort to restore all the silent films made by the pair. There are DVD releases of the 1927 films they made and the 1928 films will be out soon. Two Tars is one of their films that quickly descends into ever escalating violent retribution. The pair pick up a couple of girls (funny jokes with a chewing gum dispenser) but the mayhem moves up many notches as they get out on the road and car after car is slowly demolished mostly by hand. Subtlety had yet to appear in their comedy. Pratfalls were the go...

Coline Serreau

That was followed by the first film in the series devoted to a retrospective of films by Coline Serreau. Serreau was introduced by Mariann Lewinsky who noted it was the first time she had ever introduced a living film-maker. Very important. Serreau's Chaos (2001),  was not known to me and apparently not to many in the audience. The film was screened on 35mm with subtitles under the screen which might indicate that it hasn't circulated widely. A frenetic and often very funny film about family and domestic relationships which become entangled in a case where a bunch of pimps beat a prostitute into a coma and slowly an incredibly complicated revenge comedy gets moving as a family of grandmother, father, mother, son plus son's array of girlfriends start to revolve around the rehab of the prostitute, her extraordinary back story of drug addiction, family violence and exploitation....very edgy fun throughout. 

In the evening in the Piazza there was a screening of Henri Decoin's 1951 Simenon adaptation La Verite sur Bebe Donge,  a film that fits into two strands - a new restoration and a nod to an exhibition devoted to Simenon which will also include a talk by Simenon's son....

Wednesday, 18 June 2025

On Blu-ray - David Hare is impressed by Criterion's new edition of MISHIMA: A LIFE IN FOUR CHAPTERS (Paul Schrader, USA


After the major disappointment with
Criterion’s new Blu-ray of Midnight, it’s nice to get a really fine, blow-it-outta-the-water 4K UHD of Schrader’s terrific Mishima, complete with giant booklet and a folding box within the sinisterly faux-camp lurid cover.

The UHD is from a brand new 4K scan from Warner and encode from Criterion in-house which just goes to show how good they can be. The decision was made to stay with SDR 8 bit dynamic range rather than 10 bit which is both interesting and compelling. There’s so much visual artifice in the picture by way of extreme high contrast black based B&W and kaleidoscopic color which although wide ranging never pops beyond the intended pastel. 

All things considered this is a brilliant presentation. I rewatched the older Blu-ray before ordering this and I frankly wondered how much better a 4K could be. The answer is emphatically YES IT IS: for depth, texture, detail and sheer filmic consistency. Along with Arrow’s absolutely flawless 4K of American Gigolo these two titles are 4K catnip for fans. 

Tuesday, 17 June 2025

SYDNEY FILM FESTIVAL - Persecution is complex - IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT (Jafar Panahi, Iran, 2025) + THE SECRET AGENT (Kleber Mendonca Filho, Brazil, 2025)

These two films were among a number of blockbuster successes at the Sydney Film Festival. One measure of such success occurs when the Dress Circle is opened up and filled with a thousand bodies, many of them in the rear seats peering at a screen the size of a postage stamp from seats installed when the nation was a whole lot thinner than it is now. That happened with both.

Some 150 programs, a third of the 448 on offer, sold out  and the SFF management reported it's attendance was up by 11% to more than 150,000 admissions, claimed by CEO Frances Wallace as  "the highest selling edition in its 72-year history. The 150,000 attendees represented a 11% increase on 2024."  Though what to make of the claim previously made in  2019 that that  "event was the most highly attended Sydney Film Festival to date: attendances at screenings, events and talks were up by 10.5% in 2019 to 188,000." Maybe it's a BC (Before Covid)/AC reset.

Both films came to the festival accompanied by their directors, fresh from award-laden appearances at Cannes where Jafar Panahi's film It Was Just An Accident won the Palme d'Or and Kleber Mendonca Filho won the Best Director Award and the FIPRESCI Prize awarded by a Jury presided over by our own CJ Johnson. 

Panahi's film, as with everything he makes, shows no fear. It's story of a victim of official state torture accidentally coming across the man who may or may not have been his torturer is an an astonishing blend of comedy and up to the minute politics via a series of increasingly absurd twists of circumstance. And you get the sense of underlying, seemingly casually displayed, bravery by not only Panahi but also his actors and technicians in making a film which lays out the oppressiveness of the regime and the dangers its citizens still face each day.

Wagner Moura, opening sequence of The Secret Agent

Cant say the same about The Secret Agent which sets itself back in 1977 when Brazil was a fascist police state. The film takes over  two and a half hours chiefly to tell the story of one dissident among a broad canvas of the fearful, the disgruntled and the lumbering police state and its assassins. It may be that there are still lessons and warnings for Brazilians, indeed for all of us in an age of Trump, ICE, El Salvador concentration camps, mass deportations, arrests of political opponents and, even closer to home, whistleblowers being jailed and police forces everywhere being given ever greater resources, one of the few election promises made routinely and one of the few honoured to the letter. 

I digress...The Secret Agent is a safer story and the director is never likely to go to jail for telling it at such length and with such languour, a trope demonstrated from the very start in a slow boil opening sequence involving a VW beetle pulling in for petrol, a dead body lying in the sun and a stray police car whose inhabitants, rather than investigating the body threaten and try to shakedown the VW driver. All that takes over 18 minutes and finally the film gets going...

CINEMA REBORN - June Newsletter - Dates for 2026 plus lots of restoration and screening news.


The Hawthorn Lido and Lido Cinema One


Cinema Reborn Dates for 2026 in Sydney and Melbourne
For the last two years Cinema Reborn has expanded its program in Sydney to cover a full week of screenings from Wednesday to Tuesday.  (Thursday to Tuesday in Melbourne.) In 2025 on the final two days we presented several films in each city that were having their first and only screening in the season. 

After some consideration and in consultation with our screening partners at the Randwick Ritz and Hawthorn Lido we have decided to rejig our screening format. In 2026 in each city we will open on a Friday evening and conclude our season on the next Sunday. In Sydney the season will run from Friday 1 May to Sunday 10 May and in Melbourne from Friday 8 May to Sunday 17 May. We expect over that time to screen between 20-22 films in each city, depending on the running times of each of the films chosen. There will be repeat screenings of some of the films on weekdays in Sydney from Monday 4 May to Friday 8 May and in Melbourne from Monday 7 May to Friday 11 May.  MAKE A DIARY ENTRY NOW!

New Organising Committee Member Zac Tomé
Cinema Reborn welcomes our newest member of the Organising Committee and a boost to our presence and activity in Melbourne. Zac Tomé (above)is a filmmaker, film writer, photographer, and aspiring academic living in Melbourne/Naarm. His filmmaking is interested in the intersection between the histories of place and how that reveals itself in contemporary everyday-lived experience. He is a recent graduate of the Film Masters program at the University of Amsterdam where he wrote a thesis on contemporary independent Australian film. During our recent season in Melbourne Zac volunteered on our Information Desk, provided editorial assistance on the Cinema Reborn catalogue and  introduced My Darling Clementine at its main Melbourne screening. 


Restoring the classic Australian documentary WOOLLOOMOOLOO.
Film-maker Pat Fiske has embarked on the task of restoring her 1978 documentary. She writes: In 1973, Denise White, Peter Gailey and I were struck by the potential life changing impact of the actions of the various community groups, the NSWBLF and their Green Bans were doing. We began work on our first 16mm feature film. The section about Woolloomooloo and Victoria Street was originally intended to be about 10 minutes in the completed film about the history of the BLF and the Green Bans. When we came to the editing, we had such a bounty of footage our planned 10 minutes had turned into a two hour rough cut. So, we decided to make a film about Woolloomooloo first. When Woolloomooloo was finally completed in 1978, I went back to tell the broader BLF and Green Bans story, creating the film, Rocking the Foundations (1985), which has since been beautifully restored by the National Film and Sound Archive. Sadly, the NFSA can only restore a few films each year. 
We have commenced a Fundraiser to RESTORE our 16mm film Woolloomooloo to a very high quality digital product.Donations to this Project are 100% Tax Deductible through Documentary Australia  CLICK HERE


REMEMBER BELSEN - Q&A screening of a new documentary by Frank Shields.
Frank Shields has been making films since the early 1970s. His documentary on Breaker Morant (1974) won numerous awards and his 1986 film The Surfer  was selected as an official entry in the Cannes Film Festival. To mark the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen, Frank invites you to join him on 25th June for a powerful evening at Randwick Ritz Cinemas for a screening of his latest film, a thought-provoking documentary Remember Belsen. For details of the film and to make a booking CLICK HERE

THE PLEASURES OF THE BIG SCREEN 
A link to a piece in The Guardian by Caitlin Cassidy which gives much comfort to those of us who still love seeing movies, new and old, on the big screen.  

CINEMA REBORN ON FACEBOOK
Our Facebook page has posts throughout the year with details of classic screenings, film events and restoration news and other activity of interest to cinephiles. Become a Follower and you will be first with the latest. Just click here

Saturday, 14 June 2025

Sydney Film Festival - Another happy family film - BIRTHRIGHT (Zoe Pepper, Australia, 2025)

Maria Angelico, Travis Jeffery, Birthright

I wish I had written down one phrase uttered by director Zoe Pepper in her introductory remarks to the screening of her film Birthright at the Sydney Film Festival. Suddenly  a remark was made that sought to elevate the film to a level where it's comedy and drama have ultra-significance for Australian society as we endure the twin nation-destroying crises of cost of living and housing unaffordability inflicted on us by the do-nothing showboating Albanese government, crises unlikely to be solved in anyone's lifetime by Albo and his crew of chancers, opportunists and ne'er do wells who have stolen our politics and have embarked on a journey designed to inflict endless pain on us all for the next generation or even beyond. Right...got that...

But I didn't remember the words and so I'll have to let it go...

Not too long into Birthright I kept thinking this film is picking up on some familiar tropes. The laugh out loud but frequently violent satires of Miike Takashi came to mind, but as the film upped towards some quite unexpected violence, it seemed to me that the method, if not the subject, was previously seen in the various iterations of the TV series of Fargo.

For an hour or so it is a funny film. A late thirties couple, she heavily pregnant, are booted from their flat and land themselves back with his parents in what seems to be, if not luxurious, very comfortable accommodation. The young couple cant afford a place of their own. He's just lost his job as well. (How the  father worked to buy the house is the subject of one bitter exchange between father and son. "It's not like that anymore"!) The parents feel very put upon and quite unwelcoming and even plot to get rid of the 'kids'. That's foiled by one very funny plot development....and there's one genuinely brilliant bit of humour involving sex and a leather jacket.

Then, on their wedding anniversary night, the parents decide they aren't going to take it anymore and the film goes down a very dark and violent path. Not quite as funny.... 

The crowd loved this debut feature out of the west. It played in Tribeca and you can read what attracted the international attention here. It has a distributor and with a bit of luck it should be more widely seen. 

On Blu-ray - David Hare is not happy with the Criterion edition of MIDNIGHT (Mitchell Leisen, USA, 1939)

 A few screens from Criterion's new Blu-ray of Mitchell Leisen's Midnight.





I won't comment at length but there's no doubt this should have been served up as a fully fledged 4K UHD disc. The Blu-ray runs with a healthy bitrate of ca.40 kbps which is usually enough to give a good theatrical 2k standard to a 35mm 1.37 B&W movie transfer with plenty of grain and detail. But this just doesn't. The image manages to display good nitrate shimmer and sparkle (of highlights and wardrobe designs) and the dynamic range (SDR of course) gives nice jet blacks and a good wide light exposure.
But there's just no fucking grain. I don't know how they've done this but if it wasn't actually de-grained at some level pre-mastering I suspect Criterion have gone into their now notorious filtering, a process which makes it "easier" to deliver a 2K encode without straining the grading process. They are now notorious for this.
As it stands this is very, very disappointing Blu-ray gets only part of the way towards replicating the 4K master which was itself derived from a long "hidden"/aka mislabelled deposit entry at Library of Congress as a dupe pos which in fact turned out to be a nitrate fine grain. Hence the gorgeous step across from the original to 4K scan is only one step off a nitrate O-neg.
I can only assume Criterion figures the sheer dollar return on this would not be enough to justify doing even a bare bones SDR 4K. I just hope the rights are not once again restricted so that someone else, and more reliable for quality mastering like Indicator in the UK can do this justice.

Friday, 13 June 2025

Sixty Years of Art Cinema 1960-2020 : Bruce Hodsdon continues his series - Asia - 6 (43) Japan - Part 2 - OSHIMA AND THE NEW WAVE

 

Nagisa Oshima
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                

“Social critic, political agitator, and […] well-known television personality, Nagisa Oshima has always pursued a cultural strategy of which film-making is only a part. At the same time, Oshima’s cinema itself does not remain within the domain of classical film art. In his best films he shows an interest beyond illusionism designed for telling a story. This attitude pushed him into the foreground of the Japanese avant-garde in the 1960s, and made him one of the most influential film-makers in Japanese history.  (Hiroshi Komatsu, 718)                                                                       

The 60s modernist paradigm of the New Wave was centred on Oshima and Shohei Imamura,  As outlined above, it constituted “an avant-garde movement” initially born within the rigid structure of the commercial studios   Oshima took a politico-sociological approach, Masahiro Shinoda an historical, and Imamura a cultural-anthropological one, but all dealt with the problem of a new self-consciousness. Their cinematic form, like that of the French New Wave, was also influenced by a desire to overthrow the narrative and technical conventions established by the studio system. (Audie Bock, 266).

Although of the left, Nagisa Oshima (1932-2013) always distrusted party politics and remained fiercely independent and critical of the Old Left, this opposition given clearest expression in Night and Fog in Japan. “The greatest obstacle to the influence of art in present day Japan, and within it” he said “is the politicisation which enslaves art.”  One of Oshima’s predominant themes is the linkage of sex and revolution to represent the “positive energy” of human beings and their most overt defiance of societal conventions” (Max Tessier, 69).

Night and Fog in Japan

The title of
 Night and Fog in Japan/Rishon no you to kiri (1960), a homage to Alain Resnais' holocaust documentary Night and Fog (similarly “a narration, a memory and an argument”), in which Oshima’s historical, critical and theoretical concerns become clear in a form of post-mortem rather than a call to action per se, or perhaps only to rake over the implications of the failure of the violent demonstrations by the Left that ultimately failed to stop the signing of a new US-Japan Security Treaty in 1960 which was not supported by majority of public opinion. In the film, angry staged exchanges involving the past intruding upon the present as offscreen space intrudes upon onscreen space - flashbacks from the wedding of a former Japan Communist Party activist and a member of the student radical group (the New Left having split from the CP) the wedding meant to be a symbol of reconciliation. 

The multidimensional structure which Oshima would later return to in The Ceremony, juxtaposes two groups one in 1952 (the Old Left Communists must deal with a spy) and the wedding banquet in 1960 (the New Left must deal with the failure of the struggle against the Security Pact renewal) are shown focusing on their respective responses in a process of dialectical struggle on two levels - past and present.  The constantly panning camera refuses to allow the wedding proceedings to go unchallenged. Shedding light on the internal and external contradictions arising from the May-June 1960 events involves a complex tour-de-force of deliberately outrageous theatricalisation in 43 to 45 sequence shots as internal edits are replaced by lateral pans over the assembled wedding group, objective chronological narrative replaced with the highly subjective flashback structure in which the characters present their own experience of the events. “Out of this strategy a critical political discourse emerges that finally holds the CP members responsible for the failure of the action taken against the bid for power of the pro-American government.  After this Oshima calls on intellectuals (his audience) not to repeat this error.” (Tessier 73).

After going through an extremely difficult time in dispute with Shochiku over Night and Fog which they pulled out of release after only four days apparently for political reasons (‘the avant-garde film defied the entertainment demands of the company’). “It employed methods never before seen in Japanese cinema, and proved immensely influential on other young filmmakers “ (Komatsu 718). Oshima walked out with several colleagues to set up their own company in 1961.

One of Oshima’s favourite targets was the need for renewal. He wrote in 1963 about such a need in the form of a new subjective consciousness to replace the pseudo subjectivities - rigidity on the part of the old Left and naivety on the part of the New -  that needed to be eradicated and replaced with a single truly subjective movement;  pseudo subjectivity he argued was “the victim syndrome.” This, Oshima saw as being reflected in the majority of Japanese films: that fifteen years after the war's end the Japanese saw themselves as “victims of the war” while not attempting to go beyond for its profound causes (Tessier 74). As Komatsu emphasises “Oshima’s films are responses to actual events, changes and problems in Japanese society, and so each film inevitably holds a close connection to the time in which it was made [to be seen] “in form as well as content” (ibid).

The Catch

In 
The Catch/Shiiku (1962), a black American airman is held captive in a small village during the last summer of WW 2. He is used as a scapegoat for all the psychological ills of the villagers.  The war ends without them being able to turn him over to the authorities and they end up killing him. The mean hypocritical, deluded behaviour of the adults is highlighted by the reaction of the children. The situation with the villagers provided an opportunity for Oshima to attack the myth of the “victim syndrome,” the island a microcosm of postwar Japan

Max Tessier marks Violence at Noon/Hakuno torima (1966) as “a turning point both thematically and aesthetically in a greatly diversified life’s work that reached a zenith in The Ceremony and In the Realm of the Senses” (p.76). As in other of his films, in the story of a real life sexual psychopath, a rapist and murderer metaphorically characterised as “ Floating Ghost in Broad Daylight” - as the Japanese title translates - in contrast with the darkness enclosing Night and Fog in Japan. Oshima takes up the theme, as he explained, of the obsessed “demonic” criminal who feels inside himself a powerful urge to do evil without necessarily knowing why. He can only obtain sexual satisfaction through rape. The focus is not on a police man-hunt but on two women who knew him and, through them, the history of the village where he was born. Oshima reveals his real subject slowly in frequent flashbacks combined with fantasy scenes : an account of the decay of postwar idealism and the inexorable restoration of the old inequalities and injustices. (Tony Rayns, ‘Time Out’).  In place of any semblance of realism is a mosaic of around 2000 shots with constantly changing camera angles obscuring any possibility of a 'single truth’.  It is one of several films made by Oshima, 1965-9, with “the links between eroticism and violence, sex and politics, and the ambivalence about the sex roles, all coming together [most explicitly] in In the Realm of the Senses (1976)” (David Desser, 97).

Sexual and criminal obsession fuels A Treatise on Japanese Bawdy Song/Nihon s shunka-ko (1967) in which Oshima ridicules the symbols of the imperial state, identified by Tessier with the following four titles below as “essential titles” - five landmarks in the investigation of language that constitutes a radical break from the syntax of Japanese cinema (77).  

 Japanese Summer: Double Suicide/Muri shinto nihon no natsu (1967) is a study of traditional “double suicide” with a modern twist. A man is looking for someone who is willing to kill him, and a woman is looking for someone to make love to her. The two meet and get voluntarily involved in a gang war. Just before being shot by police they commit suicide. “Filled with anarchy and nihilism, and obsessed by destruction and nothingness Japanese Summer gets lost in Oshima’s fascination with his own structural elements […] it succeeds in communicating this fascination to the viewer” (Tessier 79).

Death by Hanging

Death by Hanging 
(1968), like all of Oshima's films, with the exception of Max Mon Amour, deals in a challenging way with specifically Japanese questions and problems. Here, in ”one of Oshima’s most sustained assaults on the Japanese state” (ibid 78) taking the form of an absurd comedy about the situation of Korean immigrants in Japan, centring on a state hanging that goes wrong mounted as a sort of witty Brechtian argument.  (Tony Rayns )

In Three Resurrected Drunkards/Kaette kite yopparai (1968) one of Oshima’s most clearly Godardian works in the manipulation of film language, returns to the serous topic of the Korean problem, comic conceptual games including playing with the structure of the film itself, involving illegal Korean immigrants who steal clothes to change their identities

Diary of a Shinjuku Thief/Shinjuku dorobo nikki (1968) is a teasing and provocative collage inspired by the student riots of’ ’68 and contemporary youth culture generally, Shinjuku being the entertainment centre for youth culture.  While centrally recognised as an exploration of the links between sex and politics, it is also recognised by Desser “as the most completely theatricalized of Oshima’s films” (188) The connecting thread in the themes subordinate to the idea of acting is a relationship between an aggressive and vaguely masculine young woman and a passive and vaguely effeminate young man. The pursuit of satisfactory orgasms with each other takes them through a dizzying mix of fact and fiction including an encounter with a real life sexologist and involvement in a 'fringe' performance of a neo-primitive kabuki show “stealing' roles from the neo-primitive group, the Situation Players. “Existing logical connections are deliberately obscured by contrasting moods, styles and lines of thought” (Tony Rayns).  Desser sees “the links between sex and revolution [as forming] the structuring basis of what is one of Oshima's most important films.”  His point seems to be [as he explained] that “sexual frustration is one of many sorts of frustration that go with the various forms of rebellion.” (Desser 93)

Boy

Boy/
Shōnen (1969) is based on a newspaper story: a down and out family make their young son fake road accidents in order to blackmail motorists for 'hospital fees’. “Starting with character studies of the family members,  Oshima develops this story into an open-ended question about the truth of appearances centring on the boy's own fantasies about his sci-fi hero[…] A key film in the struggle for a modern political cinema.” (Rayns). The father, a war veteran who claims war injuries prevent him from working is a cruel patriarch who robs his son of the pleasures of childhood. While classical in form, Oshima sharply turns away from any possibility of the emotion of sentimental family melodrama “by resorting to ellipses or by introducing imaginary scenes “forcing the spectator to reach the level of surreality required by the filmmaker“ (Tessier 78) to the extent of seeming to exonerate the parents.  Prior to In the Realm of the Senses, Boy was Oshima's most successful film in western art cinemas.

The Man Who Left His Will on Film/Secret Story of Postwar Tokyo/Tokyo senso sengo aiwa (1970) described by Tessier as “undoubtedly a rough draft of a film, unsatisfying but necessary to the development of the next film, The Ceremony, “which appears to be the summation of Oshima’s work to date” (81). It is a biting and cautionary film, Oshima's post-68 analysis of the failure and disillusionment of the student left. Motoki, a student, and members of the “Posi Posi” group act out their own parts. Motoki discovers that he is incapable of filming the street uprising named “the Tokyo War” at the time of the post -1968 demonstrations. He finally commits suicide, leaving his fantasies on film. Like Death by Hanging, it starts with a riddle (the real or imagined disappearance of a student militant) and then follows through all the implications with a remorseless logic. It's less a mystery thriller than a series of provocative questions. What is militancy? Does struggle mean violence? Is it really possible for an individual to identify with the interests of a group? And what part do sexual problems play in determining the feelings and actions of young people? (Rayns)

The Ceremony

The Ceremony/Gishiki 
(1971) is a thinly disguised commentary on Japan's post-war history using ceremonial family gatherings (mainly weddings and funerals) as a key to the changes in Japanese society: individual characters represent specific political factions, just as events in the narrative mirror the twists and turns in Japan's domestic and foreign policies. The nature of rituals recurring through Oshima’s work beginning with Night and Fog, their theatrical nature and “the way in which the Japanese ruling class ropes together religious and political ideology to naturalize its existence is deconstructed in The Ceremony” (Desser 187). Oshima “keeps the dense allegory accessible by stressing individuals' feelings – their dreams, aspirations, frustrations and agonies - as much as ceremonies” (Rayns). “ Oshima reveals that it is precisely the ceremonies that function to keep the family together, but when such ceremonies are revealed as hollow, meaningless (such as the “brideless” wedding sequence), as the structures which bind the family are unraveled” (Desser 188). “The director’s “flow of consciousness” is still active. Banquets interrupted, family contradictions, songs - military, romantic, bawdy, or political. Oshima, however, adds a few episodes of his invention sending the film over into fantasy and surrealism once again” (Tessier 82). In 1971 Oshima’s prognosis for the future was not optimistic, the Japanese in 25 years, he concluded, had undergone no basic change.

“Along with Death by Hanging, A Treatise on Japanese Bawdy Song and Night and Fog in JapanThe Ceremony ranks as one of Oshima’s own favourite films - the ones he feels that only he could have made […] It is the complexity of its commentary on the whole 25 years of Japanese postwar history that redeems the sentimentality for him […] the amount of himself he recognises in the main character of the film, Masuo” (Bock 324).  Oshima considered that during ceremonies Japanese are possessed of particularly delicate emotions often completely unrelated to their daily lives, a time when the special characteristics of the Japanese spirit are revealed. In a statement released at the time of the international release of The Ceremony, Oshima further explained that his own spirit wavered during such occasions. What worried him was that one might easily reject, both intellectually and emotionally, militarism and xenophobic nationalism in daily life, but that these forces are not so easily denied.

Dear Summer Sister

D
ear Summer Sister/Natsu no imoto (1972) is a parable about Japan's Okinawa problem beginning in present day Okinawa,  a holiday resort for the Japanese. The underlying thread of a girl's search for her long-missing brother begins to conjure up guilt-ridden memories of the island as the site of war-time atrocities. Continuing exploration of film language, the improvisation method proven in Shinjuku Thief and The Man Who Left His Will.. “without breathing new life into them or probing more deeply” (ibid).

As far back as his first film made at Shochiku's Ofuna studio, Yoshishige Yoshida (1933-2022) was “trying to achieve a new type of drama by deconstructing the traditional ideology of the company” (Komatsu 717). The height of his achievement is to be found in Eros + Massacre (1969). Desser writes that Yoshida's film, with two others, Hani's The Inferno of First Love (1968) and Oshima's The Man Who Left His Will on Film (1970),  “reveal the essence, the height, and the end of the New Wave...[They] encapsulate virtually all of the themes […] and portend the end of the movement. In some sense they stand as elegies not only to the New Wave of the cinema, but to the end of the era of the 60s in Japan […] which began with Ampo toso, the Anti-Security Treaty demonstrations  in 1959-60” (192), although, as Desser details, protest action against the US military (anti-nuclear, Vietnam) continued throughout the decade, actually peaking in intensity in 1969.

Yoshishige Yoshida

It is not clear that the three filmmakers - Hani, Yoshida and Oshima -  realised that they were witnessing the last phase of violent protest (195). 
The '69 demonstrations were far more violent and spectacular than those in 1960. Desser states that Oshima was saddened by the reappearance of Stalinism in small sects of student activists which he felt destroyed his generation. There was also the feeling of being unable to communicate with the student activists and with youth in general. This led the filmmakers to reexamine their politics and its relationship to cinema. (196)

Reflexivity in their above three films takes various forms. All three focus on filmmaking as diegetic ( fictional) activities. There is a focus on projecting and viewing films. The use of projectors is understood as a projection of desire, the desire to create cinema, the will to film. But this inevitably leads to death, in all three a protagonist dies : that there is nothing to film, that the will to film leads to the death of film, a function of failing political aspirations. The breakdown of narrative reflects the fragmentation of reality and of individual character, clearest in Hani's Inferno. The death of narrative is most overt in Oshima's The Man Who Left His Will on Film in which no story emerges because there is no character. The unresolved dialectical tension in the film between documentary and fictional modes “may be expressed as the struggle between Marx and Freud, documentary and fiction, exterior and interior, between, if you will, Lumière and Méliès.” (ibid 200).

Masahiro Shinoda

Of the New Wave directors 
Masahiro Shinoda (1931-2025) who directed his first three films in two years focussing on youth and youth gangs, was the most versatile and prolific directing more than 30 features, 1960-2003.  His approach was described by David Desser as “never as radical as Oshima nor as consistent as Yoshida and certainly not as satirical as Imamura” (138). He made films set in a variety of periods ranging from a standard Samurai film like Samurai Spy (Sarutobi ,1967) to the “extremely deconstructive” Assassination (Ansatsu, 1964). Shinoda’s particular contribution reached “a maturity of vision and style” to the politicised image of women in his ninth feature Pale Flower (Kawaita hana, 1963) in linking his female figures with youth images. While he did not feel part of “anything like a school,” Shinoda said that what they did share was antagonism to the older generation’s confidence in a settled humanism with conclusive characterisation and story according to a set script, instead being drawn to a more open, improvised approach, as in Pale Flower where “in the script […] one line ‘they are gambling’ […]  became 120 shots” (interview in ‘American Film’ May 1985).

Susumu Hani

Noel Burch saw Susumu Hani as standing somewhat apart from Oshima and Yoshida as perhaps the unwitting elegists of the New Wave when the decade of violent protest transpired to be a final surge. Burch finds Hani, in his films like The Inferno of First Love (1968), lacking in his grappling with “the theoretical aspects that make all of Oshima's films so important” although they do contain “some brilliantly impressive passages” (347). The main characters “are definitely first cousins of the “mad' young people in Diary of a Shinjuku Thief and Yoshida's Eros Plus Massacre but Burch considers that Hani “does not seem committed to them, and his eclecticism has nothing to do with Oshima's constant concern to renew himself” (ibid).  Burch also sees Hani as a figure apart in the New Wave, his films marked by a mix of the methods of fiction and non-fiction abounding in the subtle touches to be found in She and He (1963), seen to be equal to that of Antonioni at that time.

Yoshida in Eros + Massacre is similarly dialectical as Hani in juxtaposing documentary with fiction, but also additionally “Marx to Freud, history to myth, politics with sexuality.” Yoshida alternates two time-frames, the present (1969) and the past (1916-23) and compares the political/sexual struggle of an anarchist couple in the ‘past’, Osagi Sakae and Ito Noe, to fictional characters in the 'present', students Eiko and Wada.  Desser states “the past is both imagined and recreated. Past and present merge. Characters in the past emerge in the present.” Scenes are repeated and performance theatricalised in line with post-Shingeki theatre's rejection of Shingeki's modern realism and its accompanying ideology (Desser 173). Visually, the off-centre stark compositions in black and white on widescreen ratio, more than rival Antonioni's.

Self referentiality, reflexivity and a dialectical narrative structure characterise these three films (by Oshima, Hani and Yoshida) for the purpose of posing the question of the nature of political filmmaking in the face of political disappointment. The question of youth's search for identity is similarly present in all three films (Desser 200-1). As indicated, Eros juxtaposes and compares two generations of political and sexual radicals. What is lacking is information as to how the films, Oshima's and Yoshida's in particular, were received by critics and audiences. For Noël Burch Eros is “Yoshida's masterpiece...few films in western cinema are as freely disjunctive and as dialectical in their approach to space-time” (348).  However, except for Burch, David Desser and Keiko McDonald, Eros + Massacre is largely by-passed in analyses and discussions of the New Wave reflecting the degree of difficulty it presents for the uninitiated viewer. Originally running three and a half hours, a circulating version on DVD of Eros is 166 mins, however a recent Blu-ray release restores the film to 186 minutes.

The centrality of women to questions of identity and sexuality, translates into the above three films each with important female characters. Historically the short-lived left-leaning tendency films of the late 20s - early 30s, focused on the working class, the majority with women as central characters looking forward, as Desser notes, to the New Wave's finding of women as a powerful metaphor for the situation of alienated groups in the postwar era (109). The replacing stream of films, termed “feminisuto”  (from the Japanese pronunciation of feminist) were produced by directors who had a feminist viewpoint such as Mizoguchi, Shindo and Imamura.

Japanese critic Tadao Sato differentiates the nuances of feminisuto as a tendency to idolise women as uncomplainingly rich in endurance rather than as figures of pathos, “the worship of womanhood as a special Japanese brand of feminism […] having its roots in the moral consciousness of the ordinary people” (Sato 78). He also notes that in Mizoguchi’s postwar masterpieces the romantic and realistic approaches were combined harmoniously with the central theme of worship of womanhood. Writer- director Kaneto Shindo (1912-2012) who had studied scriptwriting under Mizoguchi, can be considered the inheritor of this theme in the dramas he directed himself, “all of which were centred on women that  were neither naively beautiful or awe-inspiring.” Desser sees his view of women “as almost a direct extension of Mizoguchi’s […] most specifically in the atmospheric horror film Onibaba (1964) ”which focusses on women as innocent victims of war yet with commitment to survival comparable to Imamura’s women forcing them into the role of spider women” (120).

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Many of the films mentioned in  this post by Bruce may be viewed in high quality subtitled copies by searching The Internet Archive


Previous entries in this series can be found if you click the following links

 

Sixty Years of International Art Cinema: 1960-2020 - Tables and Directors Lists to Accompany Bruce Hodsdon's Series

 

Notes on canons, methods, national cinemas and more

 

Part One - Introduction

Part Two - Defining Art Cinema

Part Three - From Classicism to Modernism

Part Four - Authorship and Narrative

Part Five - International Film Guide Directors of the Year, The Sight and Sound World Poll, Art-Horror

Part Six (1) - The Sixties, the United States and Orson Welles

Part Six (2) - Hitchcock, Romero and Art Horror

Part Six (3) - New York Film-makers - Elia Kazan & Shirley Clarke  

Part Six (4) - New York Film-makers - Stanley Kubrick Creator of Forms

Part Six (5) ‘New Hollywood’ (1) - Arthur Penn, Warren Beatty, Pauline Kael and BONNIE AND CLYDE

Part Six (6) Francis Ford Coppola: Standing at the crossroads of art and industry

Part 6(7) Altman

6(8) Great Britain - Joseph Losey, Lindsay Anderson, Karel Reisz, Richard Lester, Peter Watkins, Barney Platts-Mills

6(9) France - Part One The New Wave and The Cahiers du Cinema Group

6(10) France - Part Two - The Left Bank/Rive Gauche Group and an Independent

6(11) France - Part Three - Young Godard

6(12) France - Part Four - Godard:Visionary and Rebel

6 (13) France Part 5 Godard with Gorin, Miéville : Searching for an activist voice

6(14) France Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Bresson 

6 (15) France Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Jacques Tati

6 (16) - Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Carl Th Dreyer

6 (17) - Italy and Luchino Visconti

6(18 - Italy and Roberto Rossellini - Part One

6(19) - Rossellini, INDIA and the new Historical realism

6(20) - Rossellini in Australia

6 (21) - Italy - Michelangelo Antonioni

6 (22) - Italy - Federico Fellini, Ermanno Olmi

6 (23) - Italy - Pasolini, Rosi

6 (24) - Interregnum - Director/Auteur/Autoren

6 (25) West Germany

6 (26) - Alexander Kluge Part One

6 (27) - Alexander Kluge Part Two

6 (28) - The Young German Cinema: Reitz, Schlondorff, von Trotta

6(29 ) West German Cinema - Fassbinder

6 (30) West German Cinema - Straub & Huillet

6(31) - New Spanish Cinema

6 (32) - Bunuel in the 60s

6 (33) Nordic Cinemas - Bergman and Widerberg

6 (34) - Scandinavia - Sjoman, Zetterling, Troell

6 (35) - East Germany - Konrad Wolf, Frank Beyer

6 (36) - East Central Europe - Poland

6(37) - East Central Europe - Hungary Part One

6 (38) East Central Europe - Miklos Jancso

6 (39) East Central Europe - Czechoslovakia

6 (40) East Central Europe - Yugoslavia

6 (41) - The Soviet Union

6 (42) - Asia - Japan - Part One