I can’t say I’m all that well versed in interpreting the structural and tonal elements of poetry. But when they’re distilled through the formal elements of cinema, it becomes more understandable to me. Lynne Sachs’ “Swerve” (2022) is heavily informed and inspired by the poetry of Filipino immigrant and former Queens-resident Paolo Javier, particularly those in his book O.B.B. (Original Brown Boy). Mixing the free-flowing and expressionistic words of Javier with several characters hanging around food hall stalls, a park, and basketball courts, Sachs gives a strangely hypnotic look at a time during the pandemic when people were okay with going outside and being among others but still encased in a bubble with their own thoughts.
The seven-minute experimental film begins in the Hong Kong Food Court in Elmhurst, Queens. One character (played by Inney Prakash) converses with a kid about his favorite school activities. He then goes around looking at the offerings at the stalls and recites lines from Javier’s poems. Another character (played by Jeff Preiss) reads more lines while sitting on a bench in the Moore Homestead Playground, located across the street from the food court. Others (played by ray ferriera, Emmy Catedral, and Juliana Sass) converse in various places within this small enclave during the film. This patch of Queens is like a microcosm of the world. All the dialogue recited in the film, both in Tagalog and English, serves a basis for exploring the way that human connection changed because of the pandemic.
Maureen Fazendeiro and Miguel Gomes’ The Tsugua Diaries (2021), another wonderful experimental non-fiction made during the pandemic, examined the passage of time in isolation, with a cast and crew maintaining a secluded area that felt detached from the rest of the world. However, the characters in “Swerve”are surrounded by people, and while the culture of Queens remains a unique part of the film and Javier’s poetry, the necessary precautions of the pandemic are everywhere and instantly, globally recognizable. Sachs’ camera, in motion constantly, rolls around, tracks, and dollies to and from its characters. The liveliness of the park and the empty seats at a restaurant offer a glimpse of a transitory period in which the pandemic is ongoing, but the inherent need for other people, for some joy, was bringing life back to Elmhurst.
In “Swerve,” Sachs separates her depiction of the pandemic from other pandemic-related films by considering how our communication with one another shifted in isolation, presenting a new challenge when we went back to socializing. The poetry — recited both on camera and as voiceover — metaphorically stands in for the characters’ internal monologues. Thoughts within our own minds become the new formal ways of keeping a conversation going. When communication is severed for so long, when dialogue doesn’t happen as naturally or as organically anymore, words become puzzles, swerving in our heads until we can make sense of them again. In the film, characters are often observing other people without talking to them. In turn, when a character recites dialogue aloud, others observe them on the peripheries. We hear what these characters have to say, but behind the masks that define the times, we don’t actually see them talking to each other.
Likewise, the film focuses on the two things many of us found solace in to replace our lack of contact with others — art and food. Characters write, eat, hang out, and think through words in poems. To combine these universal elements of social living with the distinct rooted identity of Javier’s poetry is a fascinating experiment. To see the words of a Filipino artist recited by people of different backgrounds makes one consider what being part of the community in Queens means. The film’s formal choices combine two or more elements into one — Tagalog and English language, dialogue and voiceover, conventions of documentary and experimental filmmaking, super 8mm film and digital. At its seams, “Swerve”tries to flow as freely as the writing that inspires it. It is a hard film to grasp on just one watch and it means a lot for a film, in such a short amount of time, to find its way to make sense of jumbled words and new rules of the world we live in using our love for art, food, and identity as guiding stars.
Approaches to the body, space and memory in self-referential cinema I film, therefore I exist, the course directed by Noemí García Díaz, is a space for reflection on self-referential film forms approached from a multidisciplinary perspective that includes three traditions: experimental cinema, cinema non-fiction and video art. In its third edition, the program is structured through the metaphor of the house. The house as a symbolic crossroads that embraces recurrent dimensions in self-referential cinema such as the private, public, domestic and historical, personal and political, near and far dimensions. The house as a symbol of the first space, the body, presented in its multiple forms of exposure and absence, from the most direct degrees of performativity, to the creation of figures of alterity that allow the self to be approached in a tangential and hidden way. The house as a metaphor for the family system, with its foundations, its home, its roof terraces, basements, closed rooms and its own rooms. As a present space and memory container.
In this journey towards the investigation of the self-referential gaze, we will explore both physical and figurative spaces where we can narrate distance; the distance that allows one to move away to return, to think and think-oneself. The course proposes seminars to think about self-referential cinema from a theoretical and historical point of view; monographic seminars on filmmakers and specific themes; and meetings with artists and filmmakers who will approach each format from the point of view of creation. It also proposes the development of an audiovisual practice of a self-referential nature.
This proposal is aimed both at artists and filmmakers who want to delve into the particularities of this genre and at people who are interested in the subject.
“It is still believed that you have to start from a story to make movies. It isn’t true. For Nathalie Granger I left the house alone. Really, it was. She had the house in her head constantly, constantly, and, she knows, then a story came to stay, but the house was already a cinema.” Margaret Duras
PROGRAM
SESSIONS Directed and coordinated by Noemí García Díaz, FILMO, THEREFORE I EXIST has the participation of top-level artists, filmmakers, academics and programmers. Below we offer the current list of artists for this next edition.
TOOLS 100% online and within the new flexibility in which we seek to attract the most outstanding artists and researchers within the field of self-reference. The sessions are developed from the ZOOM platform. All classes are in Spanish and the schedules are designed so that students interested in attending can either do so in the afternoon (from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.) or morning / noon schedules in the different time zones of countries of Latin America.
PUBLIC PROJECTION Of works of the students at the end of the course within the festival “Una casa” directed by Noemí García Diaz.
SCHEDULE From 19:00 to 22:00 (Madrid time). 14:00-17:00 (Argentina). 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. (Chile). 12:00 to 15:00 (Peru). 12:00 to 15:00 (Mexico). Every Tuesday from October 04. From October 4 to June 12. 30 sessions. 90 teaching hours + exercises/viewing outside the classroom. 25 seats maximum.
MEDIOGRAPHY We will have a careful and select filmography that gives echo and wide contents treated in each session. The sessions will be recorded and the students will be able to arrange them privately only in case they cannot be present in a session.
DIPLOMA At the end of the course you will receive a diploma and a certificate that justifies the completion of the course, its duration and contents.
FACULTY Noemí G. Díaz Lois Patiño Mercedes Álvarez Laida Lertxundi Mar Reykjavik Ana Isabel Bustamante Lynne Sachs Susana Blas Andrés Duque María Salgado Garbiñe Ortega Claudia Negro Valeria Hofman Efren Cuevas Diego Marchante Laura G. Vaquero Alberto Cabrera Bernal Guillermo G. Peydró Elena Arroyo Pablo Useros
ABOUT MASTER.LAV
MASTER.LAV is a unique program in its bets and proposals of an experimental nature and in the search to widen the limits of audiovisual language. The Master is articulated through continuous workshops and exercises, to which is added an annual project whose progress is shared in the classroom.
Spanish original:
Aproximaciones al cuerpo, el espacio y la memoria en el cine autorreferencial Filmo, luego existo, el curso dirigido por Noemí García Díaz, es un espacio de reflexión sobre las formas fílmicas autorreferenciales abordadas desde una perspectiva multidisciplinar que incluye tres tradiciones: cine experimental, cine de no ficción y el videoarte. En su III edición el programa se estructura a través de la metáfora de la casa. La casa como encrucijada simbólica que acoge dimensiones recurrentes en el cine autorreferencial como las dimensiones privado público, doméstico e histórico, personal y político, cercano y lejano. La casa como símbolo del primer espacio, el cuerpo, presentado en sus múltiples formas de exposición y de ausencia, desde los grados más directos de performatividad, hasta la creación de figuras de alteridad que permiten abordar el yo de forma tangencial y oculta. La casa como metáfora del sistema familiar, con sus cimientos, su hogar, sus azoteas, sótanos, habitaciones cerradas y cuartos propios. Como espacio de presente y contenedor de memoria.
En este viaje hacia la indagación de la mirada autorreferencial exploraremos tanto los espacios físicos como los figurados donde poder narrar la distancia; la distancia que permite alejarse para volver, para pensar y pensar-se. El curso propone seminarios para pensar el cine autorreferencial desde un punto de vista teórico e histórico; seminarios monográficos sobre cineastas y temáticas específicas; y encuentros con artistas y cineastas que abordarán cada formato desde el punto de vista de la creación. También propone el desarrollo de una práctica audiovisual del carácter autorreferencial.
Esta propuesta está destinada tanto a artistas y cineastas que quieran adentrarse en las particularidades de este género como a personas que estén interesadas en la temática.
“Se sigue creyendo que hay que partir de una historia para hacer cine. No es cierto. Para Nathalie Granger partí solo de la casa. De verdad, así fue. Tenia la casa en la cabeza constantemente, constantemente, y, sabe, luego, a continuación, vino a alojarse una historia, pero la casa era ya cine.” Margarite Duras
PROGRAMA
SESIONES Dirigido y coordinado por Noemí García Díaz, FILMO, LUEGO EXISTO cuenta con la participación de artistas, cineastas, académicos y programadores de máximo nivel. Abajo ofrecemos el listado actual de artistas para esta próxima edición.
HERRAMIENTAS 100% online y dentro de la nueva flexibilidad en la que buscamos atraer a los más destacados artistas e investigadores dentro del ámbito de lo autoreferencial. Las sesiones se desarrollan desde la plataforma ZOOM. Todas las clases son en castellano y los horarios están diseñados para que alumnxs interesados en asistir puedan o bien hacerlo en el horario de tarde (de 19:00 a 22:00) o horarios de mañana/mediodia en las diferentes usos horarios de paises de latinoamerica.
PROYECCIÓN PÚBLICA De trabajos de lxs alumnxs al final del curso dentro del festival “Una casa” dirigido por Noemí García Diaz.
HORARIOS De 19:00 a 22:00 (horario Madrid). 14:00-17:00 (Argentina). 13:00 a 16:00 (Chile). 12:00 a 15:00 (Perú). 12:00 a 15:00 (Mexico). Todos los martes a partir del 04 de octubre. Del 4 de octubre al 12 de junio. 30 sesiones. 90 horas lectivas + ejercicicios/visionados fuera de aula. 25 plazas máximo.
MEDIOGRAFÍA Dispondremos de una cuidada y selecta filmografia que da eco y amplia contenidos tratados en cada sesión. Las sesiones se grabarán y podrán disponerlas lxs alumnxs de forma privada solo en caso de que no puedan estar presentes en alguna sesión.
DIPLOMA Al finalizar el curso recibirás un diploma y un certificado que justifique la realización del curso, su duración y contenidos.
PROFESORADO Noemí G. Díaz Lois Patiño Mercedes Álvarez Laida Lertxundi Mar Reykjavik Ana Isabel Bustamante Lynne Sachs Susana Blas Andrés Duque María Salgado Garbiñe Ortega Claudia Negro Valeria Hofman Efren Cuevas Diego Marchante Laura G. Vaquero Alberto Cabrera Bernal Guillermo G. Peydró Elena Arroyo Pablo Useros
SEKUNDENARBEITEN
Christiana Perschon, Österreich 2021, 14 min
*WOMEN
(VALIE)
Karin Fisslthaler, Österreich 2021, 7:30 min
DAS
BIN NICHT ICH, DAS IST EIN BILD VON MIR
Christiana Perschon, Österreich 2021, 9:30 min
BEATRICE
GIBSON TO BARBARA LODEN, NINA MENKES AND BETTE GORDON
Beatrice Gibson, Großbritannien 2022, 4 min
DIANA
TOUCEDO TO DANIÈLE HUILLET
Diana Toucedo, Spanien 2022, 8 min
*WOMEN
(NICO)
Karin Fisslthaler, Österreich 2021, 2:30 min
A MONTH OF SINGLE FRAMES Lynne Sachs, USA 2019, 14 min
About
the Affairs of the Art program
This
Maria Lassing-like express lesson on the history of art takes us directly into
the heart of this year’s focus program, searching for propitious places from
which creativity emerges. After all, creativity is essential for dealing with
the daily struggle between coping with everyday life, inspiration crises,
striving for recognition, self-marketing and self-optimization pressure. How
could all that be reconciled with an artist’s own identity? Which subversive
methods can help to skirt the laws of the art world that are so hostile to art?
Four film nights – with a special focus on the fight for gender equality that
artists have waged for future generations – afford resistive considerations and
creative strategies for self-empowerment.
After the rain, magic happened. 💜
What a memorable night! A heartfelt thank you to 80 (!) people who were holding out in the rain with us to see the short film program THIS IS HOW I SEE YOU from our focus program AFFAIRS OF THE ART on the big screen in the garden cinema of @volkskundemuseumwien.
Timing could not have been better: Right after the start of the film screening the rain stopped and we enjoyed magical encounters on screen as well as a film talk with Christiana Perschon and Karin Fisslthaler after the screening.
The film program featured seven short films by women filmmakers paying tribute to iconic women artists and filmmakers who have waged a fight for artistic autonomy and gender equality for future generations: Lieselott Beschorner, VALIE EXPORT, Karin Mack, Barbara Loden, Nina Menkes, Bette Gordon, Danièle Huillet, Nico and Barbara Hammer.
ENTRE NOS (Paola Mendoza & Gloria La Morte, 2009) / SWERVE (Lynne Sachs, 2022) Museum of the Moving Image 35th Ave. at 36th St., Astoria Friday, July 15, 7:15, and Sunday, July 17, 1:30, $15 718-777-6800 movingimage.us
The
Astoria-based Museum of the Moving Image’s monthly “Queens on Screen” series —
which is not about royalty or LGBTQIA+ issues but comprises films set in one of
the most diverse areas on the planet — continues July 15 and 17 with two works
set in the borough. Up first is Lynne Sachs’s seven-minute Swerve, in which artist and curator Emmy
Catedral, blaqlatinx multidisciplinary artist ray ferreira, director and
cinematographer Jeff Preiss, film curator and programmer Inney Prakash, and
actor Juliana Sass recite excerpts from Pilipinx poet Paolo Javier’s O.B.B. (Nightboat,
November 2021, $19.95).
Illustrated
by Alex Tarampi and Ernest Concepcion, the book, which stands for Original
Brown Boy, consists of such sections as “Aren’t You a Mess,” “Goldfish Kisses,”
“Restrained by Time,” and “Last Gasp.” New Yorkers Catedral, ferreira, Preiss,
Prakash, and Sass share Javier’s words as they wander around Moore Homestead Playground and Elmhurst’s HK
Food Court. “The words each operate on their own swerve, from music that would
play in the background and from overheard conversation outside my window, on
the subway, at the local Korean deli,” Javier says at the beginning, writing in
a notebook.
The
film was shot in one day in August 2021, during the Delta wave of Covid-19, so
many people are wearing masks, and the food court is nearly empty; when Prakash
orders, a plastic sheet separates him from the employee. The performers recite
the poems as if engaging in free-flowing speech; words occasionally appear on
the screen, including “free emptiness,” “unknown thoroughfare,” and “hum your
savage cabbage leaf.”
Experimental
documentarian Sachs (Film About a Father Who,Investigation
of a Flame), who was the subject of a career retrospective at
MoMI last year, captures the unique rhythm of both Javier’s
language and the language of Queens; Javier and Sachs will be at the museum to
discuss the film after the July 15 screening.
Swerve will be followed
by Paola Mendoza and Gloria La Morte’s Entre Nos, a
deeply personal semiautobiographical story in which Mendoza stars as a
Colombian immigrant whose husband deserts her, leaving her to raise two
children in Queens. The film is shot by Oscar-nominated cinematographer
Bradford Young (Arrival,Selma), who makes the borough its
own character.
In
a director’s note, Mendoza explains, “Throughout my childhood my mother worked
countless double-shifts at the toilet bowl cleaners business and flipping
burgers at local fast food restaurants near me. We never talked about the
roaches in the house or the yearning to see our family back in the country and
culture of Colombia. Instead we had to learn to smile through the grit, the
trial of tears, and dealing with heartache. As the years passed, I came to a
sublime new realization that our story was not unique. Thousands of immigrant
mothers, for hundreds of years, have endured problems when trying to adapt to
their new immigration in the USA. My mother, like those before her, have
overcome all that remains for exactly the same reason, to build the foundation
for a better life for their children.”
FILMMAKER
LYNNE SACHS AND POET PAOLO JAVIER ON THEIR NEW FILM “SWERVE”
On
tonight’s show, we’ll be joined by filmmaker Lynne Sachs and poet Paolo Javier
to discuss their collaboration on Lynne’s docu-film Swerve, set in the Hong
Kong Food Court and a near-by playground in Elmhurst, Queens and inspired by
and scripted with lines from Javier’s poetry collection O.B.B., aka The
Original Brown Boy.
Lynne
Sachs makes films that embrace hybrid forms and cross-disciplinary
collaborations incorporating the essay, collage, performance, documentary
and poetry. With each project, she investigates the connection between
the body, the camera and the materiality of film itself. She has appeared here
a number of times to discuss a number of her previous films, including Your Day
is My Night, The Washing Society, and Film About A Father Who.
Paolo
Javier describes his latest book O.B.B. – the inspiration for Swerve — as a
“weird post-colonial techno dream-pop comics poem.” It was published in 2021 by
Nightbook Press. He has since produced three albums of sound poetry with
Listening Center and was the recipient of a 2021 Rauschenberg Foundation Artist
grant. From 2010-2014 he was Poet Laureate of Queens.
Hong
Kong Food Court in Elmhurst is a gathering spot for immigrant and working class
people from the neighborhood.
After
premiering at the 2022 BAM Cinema Fest, Swerve will screen July 15&17th at
the Museum of the Moving Image as part of the Queens on Screen series.
As
part of the side programme of the 69th Pula Film Festival, as many as five
exhibitions are to open in the running up to the Festival, as well as during
the Festival. On Wednesday 13 July at 9 p.m., the exhibition And Now
– Film and Music will open at the Rock Gallery Pula. The
exhibition includes memorabilia from private archives that are a witness of the
way in which the Festival impacted the daily life of the people of Pula over
the last 50 years. On Thursday at 7 p.m. at HUiU and at 9 p.m. at SKUC, the
work in graphic design and illustration by Nedeljko Dragić, prominent Croatian
director and artist, will be exhibited. Nedeljko Dragić: Design and
Illustration 1969-1991 is an exhibition of posters for theatre and
various other cultural and tourist events and institutions, book covers,
extremely successful and popular mascots, magazine graphic design, commercial
films, etc. Before the Festival, on Friday 15 July at 8 p.m., the
exhibition Nikola Predović: Horror at Makina:Poster
Photography will open at Makina Gallery. The film photographer
will show the action in front of the camera and behind the scenes with
photographs, which require extraordinary harmony with the film crew even though
they are an important link to the viewers.
During
the Festival, from 16 to 24 July, the exhibition H-8…will
be open at the foyer of Valli Cinema. In cooperation with the Croatian Film
Archive of the Croatian State Archives, Pula Film Festival will see the unique
exhibition by Daniel Rafaelić documenting all of the stages of what is
certainly the best Croatian film, the masterpiece H-8 by Nikola Tanhofer.
The traditional exhibition Think Film: Cinemaniac XXI will open on 17 July at 8 p.m. at Pula City Gallery. This exhibition names, includes, and emphasises the work of female artists and the artistic work of women, and is formed as a temporary constellation of several recent works by female artists that create a dialogue of artistic phenomena within the group exhibition and open up the space of thinking and acting which deals with the position of female artists in the art system and artistic work, as well as their position in society. Along with the authors Sanja Iveković, Lynne Sachs, Martina Meštrović, and Tanja Vujasinović, the exhibition also has notable international female artists who are part of the anthology of avant-garde lm: Gunvor Nelson, Barbara Hammer, Carolee Schneeman. The exhibition is oragnised by Apoteka – Space for Contemporary Art, and co-organised by Waldinger Gallery and City Galleries Osijek.
This
exhibition names, includes, and emphasises the work of female artists and the
artistic work of women, and is formed as a temporary constellation of several
recent works by female artists that create a dialogue of artistic phenomena
within the group exhibition and open up the space of thinking and acting which
deals with the position of female artists in the art system and artistic work,
as well as their position in society. Along with the authors Sanja Iveković,
Lynne Sachs, Martina Meštrović, and Tanja Vujasinović, the exhibition also has
notable international female artists who are part of the anthology of
avant-garde film: Gunvor Nelson, Barbara Hammer, Carolee Schneeman.
Curated
by Branka Benčić
Organizer: Apoteka – Space for Contemporary Art Partners: Pula Pula Film Festival, Pula City Gallery Co-organisers: Waldinger Gallery, City Galleries Thanks to artists. Bonobo Studio, Kino Rebelde This exhibition is financed by the Ministry of Culture and Media of the Republic of Croatia, Croatian Audiovisual Centre, City of Pula, and County of Istria.
About
Apoteka
Apoteka – Space for
Contemporary Art is a leading institution for contemporary art in the Region of
Istria, Croatia. It is a flexible concept that works in the space of “in
between” – different positions and ideas: as a project space, a
gallery, an office, an active agent, focusing on presentation, exhibiting,
research, development, understanding, promotion, communication, networking in
the field of contemporary artistic practices, emerging artists, curating,
research, innovative and creative culture.
A Hard Act to Follow: A Daughter’s Cinematic Reckoning with Her Father By Lynne Sachs With editing advice by Alexandra Hidalgo July 8, 2022
I’ve been making experimental documentary films
since the late 1980s, beginning with Sermons and Sacred Pictures (1989)
all the way through to Film About a Father Who (2020)—a total of 37 films, ranging in time from 90 seconds to
83 minutes. Over the years, I have made non-fiction and hybrid works that
continue to shift my point of view from shooting from the outside in, to
shooting from the inside out. That is to say, I make a few films that allow me
to “open the window” on a person, group of people or place that I know little
about in order to develop a deeper understanding or answer a gnawing question
through my filmmaking. Then, I turn the camera back on myself and my immediate
surroundings to produce more personal, introspective films. This back and forth
positioning is a critical pivot that is fundamental to my own commitment to
working with reality. I can only ask the people who allow me to witness all the
vulnerable manifestations of their lives to enter my filmic cosmos if I too
have gone to a similarly exposed place myself.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Lynne Sachs learning to swim, 1965. Photo by Ira Sachs.
Film About
a Father Who is
my cinematic reckoning with my father Ira Sachs, a bohemian entrepreneur living
in the mountains of Utah. In making this film, I forced myself to follow this
sometimes daunting edict. Together shooting my images and writing my narration
made me come to terms with what I had always concealed and what I needed to
reveal. In order to bring the film to life for you, my readers, I have added
what I uttered in the film’s narration whenever it blends in a generative
fashion with what I’m discussing.
Every Thursday was Bob Dylan day. Dad didn’t care about
the lyrics or the harmony, only the melody. He was a hippy businessman, buying
land so steep you couldn’t build, bottling mineral water he couldn’t put on the
shelves, using other people’s money to develop hotels named for flowers. He worked from a shoe box, and as little as
possible.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Lynne Sachs with her father, sister Dana and brother Ira, Jr. in Memphis, 1965.Photo by Diane Sachs.
Born in 1936 in Memphis, Tennessee, my father has
always chosen the alternative path in life, a path that has brought
unpredictable adventures, multiple children with multiple women, brushes with
the police and a life-long interest in trying to do some good in the world.
He did not define himself by his work, but rather what he
did the rest of the time, like drifting down a mountain or devouring the news
and doing what you do to make children, who happen to become adults.
To own a mountain from which there is nothing you can do
but come down, nowhere to build. What happens when you own a horizon?
Shooting from the Inside Out
My film takes a look at the complex dynamics that
conspire to create a family. There is
nothing really nuclear about all of us, we are a solar system composed of nine
planets revolving around a single sun, a sun that nourishes, a sun that burns,
a sun that each of us knows is good and bad for us. We accept and celebrate,
somehow, the consequences. In 1991, when I was thirty years old, I
decided that the best way for me to come to terms with my relationship with my
father would be to witness his life, to record my interactions with him and his
interactions with the rest of my family and perhaps the world.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Ira Sachs with daughters Lynne and Annabelle Sachs in San Francisco, 1991.
I’ve never quite known where the “inside’ is with
my father. Over the decades, I’ve
organized many recorded interviews—a time, a place, and a structure so that he
would feel it was the right moment to tell me where he lives when he is alone—driving
in his car, looking out from his living-room window at the Wasatch range, listening
to the quiet of an evening snowstorm. My
father speaks more intimately of the trees and the steep slopes that reach up
around him than he does of his closest human companions. He swears to me that he does not dream, so in
“real life” he conjured his own fantastical situations.
Dad had twin Cadillac convertibles. He didn’t want his mother to know he was so
extravagant, so he painted them both red. He could pull up in either one and
she would never know the difference. For
a long time, neither did I.
The first time I saw both cars parked
together, I was shocked that he had two. It was his secret, but now I was also
keeping it.
He
had his own language and we were expected to speak it. I loved him so much that
I agreed to his syntax, his set of rules.
Rather than admit his propensity for buying one
new toy after another, my father did whatever he felt like doing and assumed we,
his children, would be there to support him.
We were good kids, so we participated knowingly in all the shenanigans
that made his world spin the way he wanted it to spin.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Ira Sachs in Oakland, California, 1991. Photo by Lynne Sachs.
Never in all the years of making this film did my
father find an ease with speaking about or even acknowledging his convulsive, peripatetic
childhood. That past is a country he
left behind. For most of my adult life, I’ve been familiar with the obvious
facts and people—his mother, high school, jobs, children—but I honestly could
not figure out how these scattered events came together to become my
father. The mature, rational “me”
whispered: “You don’t have the right or the need to put all of the pieces
together. Let him stand on the present.
The details of his past are not critical to your life.” Each and every time
that I flew from my home in Brooklyn, New York to his home in Park City, Utah,
or that he visited me, I filmed. As a
result, I had hours and hours of material on 8mm and 16mm film, video, and
digital that I needed to climb my way through.
How the Camera Witnesses our
Changing Bodies
Still, I was
scared to do this. What would I find? How
could I crack his, and thus our, finely constructed amnesia? Watching our old
movies during the editing process, I sometimes missed the people we were, or
caught a glimpse of a man I pretended to know, but somehow didn’t. There is something so apt about the
expression “Hindsight is 20/20.” The more I forged my way forward in time, the
more I learned about my father’s compartmentalized life, Slowly, I began to
realize that what I needed to articulate were the fissures, the images that I
would never be able to capture because he was performing a complicated life on
so many stages at once, and I was only privy to a few of them.
While
my “subject” was growing older, his skin taking on new wrinkles and folds, much
of the technology I was using to record our lives would change completely every
few years. Over the course of my three-decade “production”
period, I shot 16 mm film, using the same Bolex camera I purchased in 1987 for
$400. But, I also relied upon an evolving array of video tape and digital
formats. Indeed, Film about a Father Who includes an archeological palimpsest of 20th and 21st
Century technologies, including: VHS camcorders; Nagra 1⁄4” audio tape records;
HI-8; mini-DV; Digital Single Lens Reflex and Osmo cameras; Zoom digital
recorders; and, cell phones.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Lynne Sachs on road trip across the country, 1989. Photo by Lynne Sachs.
My camera witnessed. My microphone recorded. No
matter which apparatus I held, I always knew that nothing was really what it
seemed.
When I was 24, I took a trip with Dad
and my sister Dana to Bali, where he had invested in a small hotel. This was
supposed to be the first time when would have his complete attention. One
afternoon, Dad took us on a drive. Like so many times during our childhood, we
had no idea where we were going or why. We arrived at the airport and from the
car window we saw a very young woman, a girl, walk out of the terminal. We were so hurt, so infuriated that we
immediately got on a bus and went to the other side of the island, only
returning in time for our flight home. As it turned out, she was not just
another weekend date whose name we would never even learn. This was Diana [my
father’s very young girlfriend who eventually became his second wife]. It took
me six years to seek out her perspective.
Making this film forced me to come to terms
with those images that gave me aesthetic pleasure and those images that I called
“ugly” but somehow conveyed a new level of meaning. At the beginning of my logging process, I
dismissed much of the of the older tapes, particularly the ones that my father
had shot on his consumer grade VHS camera. They were too sloppy or degraded by
time and the elements, be they hot or cold. Later, with my editor Rebecca Shapass
at my side, we revisited this material and realized that these off-the-cuff images
offered us a critical opportunity to see the world through my father’s
eyes. If Dad was not going to reveal his
understanding of the world via a more typical documentary-style interview, I
would have to rely on this material to understand his point of view. With the Bali footage, for example, you can
hear slivers of conversation between my dad and me shot at night as he happened
to be staring up at the moon. When you
listen carefully to our words, you pick up the aural texture of our
relationship in a way that more image-centered material would not reveal. This discovery actually pushed me to go back
to all of my outtakes, to scavenge amongst the disregarded NG (no-good) bins in
search of the unfiltered sounds from my past. I could hear raw kindnesses,
assertive admonitions, and subtle avoidance that were, in a sense, more natural
and certainly more haunting.
I was born in the 1960s as were my sister Dana
and my brother Ira. By the time I was 10 years old, my parents were divorced.
In 1985, my father began what I’ll call a series of other family scenarios,
with a new wife, and lots of girlfriends—both simultaneously and consecutively.
There was no point in trying to keep count and initially I had no documentation
of these other lives my father was leading. By 1995, I had four new siblings; and by 2015,
we became aware that there were two more secret sisters. I was already in the
thick of making Film About a Father Who (I even had the title), but I
had to find a way to shape my narrative to allow for all of these new,
significant people.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Ira Sachs, Sr. with girl friends in Park City, Utah, 2005. Photo by Ira Sachs, Jr.
Pushing Myself to See Beyond the Surface
I decided to seek out each of my siblings (beginning with my sister
Dana born in 1962 and ending with my youngest sister Madison, born in 1995) and
three of six of their mothers (including my own), knowing that the only way I
could construct a group portrait of our father would be to include my five
sisters and three brothers. From the beginning, I was inspired by German author
Heinrich Boll’s 1971 polyvocal novel Group
Portrait with Lady, in which a narrator interviews 60 people in order to
better understand one woman. With a nod to Picasso’s Cubist renderings of a face, my
exploration of my father embraced 12 simultaneous, sometimes contradictory,
views of one seemingly unknowable man who is publicly the uninhibited center of
the frame yet privately ensconced in secrets. I hoped that my film could
ultimately see beyond the surface, beyond the persona our father had
constructed, his projected reality.
In the fall of 2017, I hired two professional
camera people and a sound recordist to join me on the day before Thanksgiving
at my brother Ira’s apartment in New York City for the first-ever gathering of
all my siblings. While everything else in the film had been shot by someone in
the family, I hoped that this formal “set up” would produce an anchor for the
narrative, an opportunity for all of us to get to know each other better and to
reveal our feelings about our father and his evolving family. We shot for four hours,
and the experience was, for the most part, cathartic. But, as I looked through
the footage with my editor, I noticed that everyone was extremely aware of how
I, in particular, responded to their words. Even a quiet sigh or a subtle
raising of an eyebrow seemed to indicate to them what I was thinking. This, I
believe, is a common scenario in documentary filmmaking, one that mirrors the
dramatic paradigm in which actors look to directors for an affirmation that
they have done a good job. It took me a year to accept that this singular, more
contrived, scene was significant in terms of who was there in the same room,
but did not take the film to the place I needed it to go.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Lynne Sachs in conversation with newly discovered sister Julia Sachs, 2018. Photo by Rebecca Shapass.
And so, throughout the following year, I either
flew my siblings to Brooklyn or went to meet them where they lived. In almost
every case, I convinced my sisters and brothers to go into a completely
darkened space with me. We often sat in closets. It was weird and very
intimate. As I recorded their voices, resonating through my headphones, I knew
I was listening to them in a deeper way than I had ever done before. There in
the dark, they each accessed something new about our father that they had never
articulated before.
We’re pretty candid about who Dad is
and we’ve seen him through a lot, but we’re also able to shift what we might
recognize as who he really is to what we want him to be.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Ira Sachs, 2018. Photo by Rebecca Shapass.
My father’s
life was clearly going to be a “hard act to follow.” Yes, I had felt empowered to shoot with him
for this protracted period of time, but every time I sat down to look at my
footage something would get in my way. I
would tell myself that all the material was so poorly shot there just wasn’t
enough to make a movie. Or I was too
busy teaching, or taking care of my children, or anything else that came to my
mind. Ultimately, what I think stopped
me each time was fear of the story I wanted to tell. Finally, I as a daughter
and a filmmaker, I realized that I needed to work with a person who could help
me muddle through half a century of material. Never in my entire career as a
filmmaker have I hired a professional editor to work with me on a film. Instead, I either cut my movie myself or
invite former students (or students of former students) to join me on this
post-production phase of a project. In 2017,
I invited Rebecca Shapass, a marvelous undergraduate student from a class on
avant-garde film, to work with me as my studio assistant. At the time, Rebecca was 22 years old,
exactly the same age as I had been when I started shooting my “Dad Film” (as my
family referred to it). Within just a
few months, I realized Rebecca was the perfect person to collaborate on my
project. Her profound empathy, her
patience, and her sophisticated aesthetic sensibility made for the perfect
combination of qualities I needed in an editor who could help me log,
transcribe and shape all of my material.
Finding My
Voice
Still, one of the biggest and most intimidating
aspects of making this film would be finding a way to translate my own interior
thoughts—be
they loving, rage-filled, compassionate or simply contradictory—about
our father into a convincing, not too self-conscious, voiceover narration.
As we moved from being girls to women,
my sister and I shared a rage we never knew how to name.
From the very beginning, I knew that Film
About a Father Who would be an essay film that would include my own
writing. One of the reasons the film took so long to make was that every time I
sat down to put a pen to paper, I became intimidated by the process. I felt
embarrassed by my anger, apologetic about my embarrassment, and frustrated by
my awkward inability to accept the whole range of emotions I wanted to express.
I also had no idea how to shape my newly discovered periods of bliss and
confidence that I had found with my father, especially since I had given birth
to my own daughters and was more insightful about the challenges of being a
parent.
In January 2019, I had a three-week artist
residency at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, New York. In my application, I
explained that I had been working on one personal essay film, dare I say it,
for most of my life, but that I needed a quiet, somewhat isolated place to
write down my thoughts. I guess Yaddo thought it was a worthy endeavor, as they
invited me to join about 12 other artists during that time. Lucky for me, I
suppose, this was a particularly icy period in Upstate New York; taking long
walks in the woods, as I had expected to do each day, was so risky that it was
prohibited. I had no excuse but to write. For the first few days of the
residency, I diligently placed my notebook on my empty desk, opened it to the
first available page, pulled out my lovely fountain pen (which I hoped would
inspire eloquence) and eventually wrote down a few words. Next, I read the
words—usually around 20 at most—over and over again. Then, I would scratch them
out and start again. At least, I thought to myself, I am not using a computer
where the delete button beckons, seduces, and devours. There were still traces of
dwindling assertions and quotidian doubts.
After a few days of anguished horror vacui, I realized that this
conventional, familiar way of writing was never going to work, at least for
this film. As if like a flash of light, or a jolt of electricity, it dawned on
me that I had other tools available that might help me to generate the words
for which I was so desperately looking. At around 4:30 p.m., just as my
dwelling in the woods was starting to get dark, I unpacked my Zoom audio
recorder, put on my headphones, closed all the doors to remind myself that I
had absolute privacy, plopped myself on my bed with a bunch of pillows, and
began to speak into the microphone. At first, it felt awkward and humiliating,
so there in the dark I decided to make myself feel even more alone. I closed my
eyes and let go. I am a person who is, more often than not, consistently
self-aware and polite. I say what I mean, but I sometimes cover up how I really
feel with an acute attention to grammar and kindness. Now, in this funky
isolation, this makeshift recording studio, this anything-goes-at-last
sensation of solitude, I let loose and the words poured out. Over a period of
10 days, I recorded hours of material—oral histories, in a sense—that were
generated by me as daughter, artist, and director. To my surprise, I was
actually able to apply the newly discovered “in the dark” approach to recording
with my siblings to the way that I listened to my own thoughts.
When I began
transcribing the words I had spoken, I found the task both painful and laborious.
Speaking these candid words pushed me to my limit,
into another zone of introspection. Then it occurred to me that in this
high-tech, service-oriented world in which we all live, I could solve this
problem quite easily. I sent my audio files to a transcription service and
within 36 hours a typed document file of an inchoate narration arrived in my
email inbox. I spent the second half of my residency reading and editing my own
words, almost as if they had been created by someone else. There, before me,
almost magically, but then again not, was the skeleton for my film, the
narration.
I actually believe that my enthusiasm for
recording in the dark is an outgrowth of the current image-crazy culture in
which we live. Each of us, in our own way, attempts to cultivate and control
the various forms of media that feign to mirror who we are. By turning out the
lights, we can begin to go beyond and below the epidermal, eventually
connecting with and releasing our inner thoughts.
Unlike the rest of the world, one of the
qualities that most intrigues me about my father is his total disregard for how
he looks on camera. Throughout our
shooting together over many years, he never thought one way or another about
what he was wearing, whether or not his hair was brushed, or who was in the
frame with him. At first this aspect of
his personality convinced me that he was going to be an easy subject of
documentary study. Only later did I
realize that in order to “get into his head” I needed to see the world from his
point of view.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Ira Sachs photographing family in Park City, 1991. Photo by Lynne Sachs
Seeing the World Through My
Father’s Eyes
In the late ‘80’s and ‘90s, Dad carried a video
camera around with him all of the time. After about a year editing together in
my studio, Rebecca and I realized that we needed to take a closer look at these
images to get into my dad’s head in a deeper way. With this frame of reference in mind, we
found two pivotal images that ultimately became key visual metaphors for the
entire film. The first image, which
appears very early in the film and then continues later in two other places, is
of three of my younger siblings playing in a stream bed on the side of a
mountain property my father had recently purchased. It appears that the shot
was produced with a tripod, as it is perfectly steady for the entire seven
minutes. For me, it is sublime. I do not
exaggerate. No doubt accidently, my
father photographed what art historians would call the golden triangle of
classical painting. As my two
half-brothers and one half-sister play and pretend to carefully move a garden
hose across some rocks, I can hear my father speaking to them with affection
and cautious scolding. Even at a distance
of about twenty feet, you can feel the parental intimacy, the children’s
simultaneous desire to please and do exactly what they want. As if worn and tattered by the thirty years
this tape spent on a shelf in my father’s garage, the footage has been reduced
to three pastel colors. Now a mother
myself, I can see how this image captures all of the love a parent can express
for their children, here it is contained by the film frame and the raw aura of the
setting.
Still from” Film About a Father Who”. Quarry explosion outside Park City, Utah, circa 1990. Photo by Ira Sachs, Sr.
In one other
initially disregarded image, I found the essence of my father’s relationship to
the natural landscape he both loves and yearns to control, even, dare I say it,
exploit. This is short shot during which you watch the top of a mountain above a
limestone quarry in the moments just before explosives are used to blow up the
ground. You can hear my father in all of
his excitement counting down the seconds before the highly anticipated
event. In the same voice that another
person might prepare for the lighting of candles on a child’s birthday cake, my
father gathers his gaggle together to watch the transformation of a mountain
side into sellable commodity. For me,
the duality of the visual moment encapsulates so much of what makes my father
the adventurous appreciator of all things natural and the clever business man
who was always looking for something that might generate some cash.
To explain every ambiguous situation
would be to dissolve the cadence of our rhythms. No balance, no scale, no grid,
no convention, no standard aspect ratio, no birthplace, no years, no
milestones. This is not a portrait. This is not a self-portrait. This is my
reckoning with the conundrum of our asymmetry. A story both protracted and
compressed. A story I share with my sisters and brothers, all nine of us. My father’s story…. Or at least part it.
Through an accumulation of facts coming
together over time, I discovered more about my father than I had ever hoped to
reveal. From this perspective, Film About a Father Who captures my
naïveté transformed into awareness, my rage transformed into forgiveness. But,
there is also another vantage point I can now better understand. As the mother
of two adult daughters, I can see the way that my actions have left an imprint
on their psyches, their sense of self and self-worth. I am steadfast in my own commitment to
engaging with them in full transparency, admitting my mistakes, and taking them
along for the long ride ahead. It may not have been by his example, but I did
learn through my relationship with my father how important it is for a child to
be brought into their parents’ lives as fully as possible.
Wearing the tell-tale masks of our daunting now, five NYC performers search for a meal in a Queens market while speaking in verse. A meditation on writing and making images in the liminal space between a global pandemic and what might come next. Inspired by the writing of Filipino-America poet Paolo Javier.
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2022 Director: Lynne A. Sachs Runtime: 7 minutes Screenwriter: Pablo Javier Language: English, Tagalog Cast: Inney Prakash, Ray Ferriera, Country: United States Jeff Preiss, Juliana Sass, Premiere: Chicago Premiere Caredral
Counter Compositions – Truth to Material
This work started with a single reel of B/W silent film. This found footage having been disassociated from its intention raises questions about the unseen and forgotten aspects of workers lives and technological histories. The images focus on the bodies and gestures of the persons working within this factory environment.
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2022 Filmmaker: Simon Rattigan Runtime: 14 minutes Language: English Country: United Kingdom
Amnesia
I get rid of memories selectively, as a form of self-salvation. A playback of the episodes I have lived renders no clue of who I think I am in the present. I guess many “me” reside in different parts of my memory. And the me of the present chooses to eliminate one of them.
Like the
replicant interrogated in Blade Runner, the person I am now is subjected to the
scathing gaze of others. And now he decides to disintegrate his existential
consciousness, by sending that of the past into exile, to the horizon where it
truly belongs.
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2020 Filmmaker: Yan Zhou Runtime: 6 minutes Language: English, Mandarin Chinese Country: China, United States Premiere: US Premiere
Fraktura
Fraktura is an abstract horror evoking a unique German expressionist atmosphere. Featuring lead type from the Gutenberg Museum (Mainz) and printing blocks from the Hatch Show Print (Nashville), the typographic forms, printed directly on 35mm film, move to the rhythm of an original score performed on a church organ.
“I made this film for the artist Haruko Tanaka. It is footage I shot in the summer of 2018 when I was in residence at the Putnam Cottage at MacDowell, a studio Haruko had worked in the winter before. I often thought of her in the month I was there. Haruko passed a few months after I returned; I made this film in her memory.” – Lee Anne Schmitt
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2021 Director: Lee Anne Schmitt Runtime: 10 minutes Screenwriter: Lee Anne Schmitt Language: English Producer: Lee Anne Schmitt Country: United States Premiere: World Premiere
A City w/o A Map
signal communications proliferate across borders. incongruent shapes subtracted from form. fractal topographies without document.
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2021 Director: Josh Weissbach Runtime: 8 minutes Producer: Josh Weissbach Language: English Country: United States, Cuba, Israel Premiere: US Premiere
Nullo
A fascinating portrait of an individual with penis dysmorphia who appears to be much happier and content without the very appendage that provides many men – especially gay men – with their entire raison d’être. (Bruce LaBruce) read full text: https://www.sixpackfilm.com/en/catalogue/2679/
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2021 Director: Jan Soldat Runtime: 16 minutes Language: German Country: Australia, Germany Premiere: Midwest Premiere
Incantation
A serendipitous ritual of memory Colliding archives of body and place A cine-incantation to freedom and (be)longing
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2021 Filmmaker: Kalpana Subramanian Runtime: 9 minutes Language: English Country: United States, India
A.I. Mama
A young programmer attempts to resurrect their lost mother by building an A.I. with human memories
Showings: Sun, Jul 31st, 4:30 PM @ Logan Theatre
Year: 2020 Director: Asuka Lin Runtime: 5 minutes Screenwriter: Asuka Lin Country: United States Producer: Giuliana Foulkes Premiere: Midwest Premiere Cast: Reinabe
Cynthia
Andrews was born
in Brooklyn, New York and raised in both Brooklyn and Queens. She is a former
actress, dancer and singer, as well as a notable performance poet and veteran
of the NYC poetry circuit. Her performance at The Nuyorican Poets Café was one
of the first to be archived at Poet’s House. She has been published in various
publications including ALOUD: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Café, The
Voice Literary Supplement, The 2020 Beat Poets Anthology,
and Tribes Literary Journal, where she has also written film
and book reviews. She is the author of two chapbooks: Saving
Summer and Homeless (The New Press), and one poetry
collection: A Little Before Twelve (Poets of Queens). She
holds a Certificate of Language and Culture from Jagiellonian University in
Krakow, Poland, as well as a B.A. from Adelphi University and an MFA in
Creative Writing from Brooklyn College.
Pauline
Findlay is a poet,
filmmaker of shorts (poetry in motion) and chef. Her new book Dysfunction:
A Play On Words In the Familiar, released by Pink Trees Press is one that
will walk you down a winding road to leave you to choose; the road of
redemption or a dysfunctional circus. One of the original Silver Tongued Devils
her work appears in their anthology as well as Brownstone Poets. She’s
performed at Fahrenheit, Women of Color and Tree of Cups the Rimes Series.
Findlay has judged poetry contests and collection of videos can be viewed on YouTube.
Her method towards writing is simple, “I don’t write in things I don’t believe
in.”
tova greene (they/them) is a non-binary,
queer, jewish poet who recently graduated with a bachelor in liberal arts from
sarah lawrence college in yonkers, new york. they were one of seven members of
the class of 2022 to submit a senior thesis; at a whopping 375 pages, “the
poetic is political” specialized in the intersection between twentieth
century american poetry & feminist theory. as a part of this year-long
endeavor, they created a chronological anthology of the american feminist
poetry movement from 1963-1989 entitled who can tolerate the power of a woman
(after “propaganda poem: maybe for some young mamas” by alicia
ostriker). their debut collection lilac on the damned’s breath was
published via bottlecap press in june of 2022. they are currently working on
their second book of poetry, ohso. they are a two-time gryphon
grant recipient & received the dean’s scholarship throughout their
undergraduate education. after interning with the poetry society of new york
from march to august of 2021, they were invited back as the program coordinator
in may 2022. in this capacity, they are currently producing the new york city
poetry festival. their work has been featured in eunoia review, midway
journal, love & squalor, clickbait, soul
talkmagazine, & primavera zine. they currently
live in manhattan with their partner & cat.
Emily
Hockaday’s first
full length book, Naming the Ghost, is out from Cornerstone Press
September 2022. She is the author of five chapbooks, most recently the
ecology-themed Beach Vocabulary from Red Bird Chaps. Her poems
have appeared in a number of journals in print and online, and she can be found
on the web at www.emilyhockaday.com.
She tweets @E_Hockaday.
Ananda Lima is the author of Mother/land (Black
Lawrence Press, 2021), winner of the Hudson Prize, and four chapbooks: Vigil (Get
Fresh Books), Tropicália (Newfound, winner of the Newfound
Prose Prize), Amblyopia (Bull City Press), and Translation (Paper
Nautilus). Her work has appeared in The American Poetry Review, Poets.org, Kenyon
Review Online, Gulf Coast, Colorado Review, Poet
Lore, Poetry Northwest, Pleiades, The
Hopkins Review, and elsewhere. She has been awarded the inaugural
Work-In-Progress Fellowship by Latinx-in-Publishing, sponsored by Macmillan
Publishers, for her fiction manuscript-in-progress. She has an MA in
Linguistics from UCLA and an MFA in Creative Writing in Fiction from Rutgers
University, Newark.
Since the 1980s, Lynne Sachs has created cinematic works that defy genre through the use of hybrid forms and collaboration, incorporating elements of the essay film, collage, performance, documentary and poetry. Her films explore the intricate relationship between personal observations and broader historical experiences. In 2019, Tender Buttons Press published her first book Year by Year Poems.
Please watch the January 17th PoQ reading here. Please watch the March 14th PoQ reading here. Please watch the May 16 PoQ reading here.
Mission
Poets of Queens creates a community for poetry in Queens and beyond.
Readings create a connection between a diverse group of poets and an audience. In 2020 an anthology of poetry by a group of twenty-five poets was published. This paved the way for Poets of Queens to start to publish individual collections to help poets connect to their community through their work. Connections are furthered when visual artists respond to poets and poets respond to visual artists as part of special projects. Poets also become mentors and teachers to fellow poets in all stages of their careers, strengthening community.
This month’s nonfiction picks include a reflection on a father, a immersive dive into the fishing industry and an alternative approach to the rock band biopic doc.
The proliferation of documentaries on streaming services makes it difficult to choose what to watch. Each month, we’ll choose three nonfiction films — classics, overlooked recent docs and more — that will reward your time.
In “Film About
a Father Who,” the director Lynne Sachs sorts through her feelings about her
elusive, problematic dad, Ira Sachs Sr. The movie, which mixes film and video
formats, brings together footage that Lynne shot over more than 30 years along
with other material from her filmmaker brother, Ira Sachs Jr. (“Love
Is Strange”), and Ira Sr. himself.
Right from the
start, Ira Sr. sounds like a bit of a flake. Lynne, explaining what her dad did
for a living, calls him “a hippie businessman, buying land so steep you
couldn’t build, bottling mineral water he couldn’t put on the shelves, using
other people’s money to develop hotels named for flowers.” He also seems to
have been a serial compartmentalizer. That trait may have been harmless enough
when it came to extravagances (he owned twin Cadillac convertibles and kept one
secret), but it caused a great deal of drama for his family. Lynne interviews
some of the women Ira Sr. had been involved with and the many children he
fathered, including two grown half sisters Lynne didn’t know about until 2016.
Did she have suspicions, you might ask? Lynne suggests that Ira Sr.’s
secret-keeping led her and her siblings to adopt a stance of what she calls
“complicit ignorance.” And Ira Sr.’s mother, called Maw-Maw by Lynne, only
complicated matters when she was alive, because, Lynne says, she “could not
take the constant flow of people that she was supposed to, quote, ‘love,’ in
the way that we’re taught to love family.”
In interviews,
Ira Sr. nevertheless comes across as a genial lug — maybe fun at parties, but
surely a handful to have as a father or a partner. “Film About a Father Who,”
whose title was inspired by Yvonne Rainer’s “Film About a Woman Who,” is a
consideration of how one man’s easygoing attitude yielded anything but an easy
family dynamic as it rippled across generations. The movie runs only 74
minutes, but it contains lifetimes.
Some
documentaries aim to impose order on the world. “Leviathan,” by contrast,
revels in abstraction and disorientation, as Dennis
Lim noted in 2012 when profiling the filmmakers for The New York
Times. The co-directors Véréna Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor, of Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab,
a group that merges the academic discipline of ethnography with the artistic
possibilities of filmmaking, shot it during six trips aboard a Massachusetts
fishing trawler. But it’s hardly an exposé or elucidation of the fishing
industry. It opens with a quote from the Book of Job and unleashes a furious
torrent of images in which it’s often difficult to know which way is up or even
whether it’s day or night.
As the title
implies, the human presence is something of a secondary concern next to the
monstrous churn of the sea or the clanking, threatening chains of the boat’s
equipment. The waterlogged, slicker-wearing fishermen aren’t identified until
the closing credits; their voices are often barely possible to understand (the
distortions of their words suggest Charlie Brown’s teacher fed through some
sort of metallic feedback), and their routines are never explained.
In interviews,
the filmmakers noted that they sought to surrender some of their agency to the
elements. Waterproof cameras get dragged underwater like a fishing net or
pulled above the surface to skip along with some hovering seabirds. They slosh
around on the floor with the day’s catch, as much a part of the detritus as the
ginger-ale can that rattles around in a pile of shells. Shooting at
ultra-close-range from boot height or at odd angles, Paravel and
Castaing-Taylor offer perspectives on the way the boat looks and sounds that
seem untethered from where our eyes would naturally dart for meaning. It’s so
vivid that at times, you swear you can smell the ship as well.
Todd Haynes
doesn’t exactly reinvent the rock-band-biopic documentary in “The Velvet Underground,”
but there are times when he seems pretty close to it. The title is in some ways
a misnomer: The focus isn’t so much on the band as the Warholian cultural
ferment of the 1960s that the group grew out of. (It’s more underground and
less, uh, velvet.) Dedicated to the memory of Jonas
Mekas, who appears, and featuring excerpts from films by him and
film-artist contemporaries like Bruce Conner, Stan Brakhage and many others,
Haynes’s movie is as interested in picture, sound and sensation as it is in
recording history.
The copious use
of split screen evokes Warhol’s “Chelsea Girls,” a work that places imagery
from two projectors side by side while the soundtrack alternates between the
film strips, allowing viewers to draw connections. In a similar spirit, Haynes
is devoted to capturing the cultural crosscurrents that shaped the band and its
members.
John Cale, one
of the band’s founders, speaks of the influence of experimental musicians like
John Cage and La Monte Young on the music he was making. Later, offering a
fan’s perspective, the musician Jonathan Richman talks about hearing “overtones
that you couldn’t account for” while seeing the Velvet Underground play. The
film critic Amy Taubin draws a link between Warhol’s silent films — meant to be
played at the slower-than-standard speed of 16 frames per second — and the
avant-garde music scene: “It was all about extended time.”
Haynes’s film
doesn’t avoid standard biographical details. There are tales of Lou Reed’s
prickliness and a long section about what happened to the band after its
game-changing (if famously not best-selling) first album. But you don’t have to
be interested in the music, or music at all, to appreciate “The Velvet
Underground” as a movie.