SFFS Fifth Annual SF International Animation Festival 2010
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SFFS Fifth Annual SF International Animation Festival 2010
(For the General Forums links and comments thread go HERE.)
Here Come the Waves: The Hazards of Love Visualized
Peter Sluszka, Julia Pott, Guilherme Marcondes, Santa Maria (USA/England 2009)
Thursday, November 11, 9:00–11:00 pm
La Mar Cebichería Peruana, Pier 1½, Embarcadero Embarcadero Center Cinema
Jackboots on Whitehall
Edward McHenry, Rory McHenry (England 2010)
Thursday, November 11, 9:30 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
The Best of Annecy
Friday, November 12, 7:00 pm & Sunday, November 14, 12:45 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Johnny Ray and Skye: Channel Drift
Friday, November 12, 9:00 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Mai Mai Miracle
Saturday, November 13, 12:00 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Good Night and Good Luck
Saturday, November 13, 4:30 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Semiconductor: Forward Looking Back
Saturday, November 13, 7:20 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Play It By Eye
Saturday, November 13, 9:45 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Gravity Was Everywhere Back Then
Brent Green (USA 2009)
Sunday, November 14, 2:30 pm
Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema
Here comes the waves: The hazards of love visualized (2009)
Opening night, 5th San Francisco International Animation Festival
Here Come the Waves: The Hazards of Love Visualized
Peter Sluszka, Julia Pott, Guilherme Marcondes, Santa Maria (USA/England 2009)
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An indie rock album provided with elaborate visuals
This hour-long animation "visualizes" the 2009 "The Hazards of Love" album rock opera or song cycle of the Portland, Oregon indie band The Decembrists, a set of songs inspired by English Sixities folk rock. The title is the name of a 1966 EP album by the English singer Anne Briggs. The Decembrists' album, a Wikipedia article explains, 'tells the tale of a woman named Margaret; her shape-shifting lover, William; his fey forest queen mother; and a cold-blooded, lascivious rake, who recounts with spine-tingling ease how he came "to be living so easy and free" in "The Rake's Song". Lavender Diamond’s Becky Stark and My Brightest Diamond’s Shara Worden deliver the lead vocals for the female characters, while My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, Robyn Hitchcock and The Spinanes’ Rebecca Gates appear in supporting roles. The range of sounds reflects the characters' arcs, from the accordion’s singsong lilt in "Isn’t it a Lovely Night?" to the heavy metal thunder of "The Queen’s Rebuke/The Crossing."'
The film is a floating visual voyage that begins with gently descending seed pods and exploding puff-balls and morphs into imaginary landscapes and animated constellations in deep, rich colors, all very much in the acid trip vein of psychedelic Sixties extravaganzas. But this is more like looking into a kaleidoscope than following a dream narrative in the vein of the Beatles' Yellow Submarine or, to move well into the Seventies, the immortal The Wall of Pink Floyd, who also seem to be a musical influence. It's very pretty but also can seem rather aimless and vapid unless you happen to be a big fan of The Decembrists or folk rock and acutely responsive to the music's changing moods. I didn't personally find that the various songs were very strikingly illustrated in the animated visualizations. As a matter of fact, watching Pink Floyd performing "Time" live at Earls Court on YouTube seemed to me a more exciting visual experience -- as a dramatic accompaniment of rock music -- than this film, and the sound is richer too. There's a limit to how psychedelic folk rock can be. The soaring echo chambers and wailing electric guitars of a psychedelic band like Pink Floyd move the mind more intensely into trippy-ness than the gentle strains. And it's not a bad idea when visualizing music to visualize the performers. Remember how Mickey Mouse meets Maestro Stokowski in Fantasia? Nonetheless Here Come the Waves: The Hazards of Love Visualized does have some spectacular passages, especially at the beginning and the end.
On the other hand, Billboard wrote of this film that "the visuals function as impressionistic landscapes and atmospheres evocative of the unfolding drama like a richly imagined liquid lightshow." I am merely showing my ignorance. Or is it simply that you had to be there, had to be a fan of The Decenbrists' (in fact highly acclaimed) EMI/Capital album delighting in the way this film raises the group by implication to the level of musical visionaries? Obviously, it helps a lot to have an incestuous familiarity with this album before you watch the film. You see what you are ready to see. And I wasn't ready. The album was toured live from Portland through New York’s Radio City Music Hall and on to big summer music gatherings including Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits. It grows on you. And as for the film, it certainly deserved to be shown on the big screen as one of the most ambitious animation efforts of the past year.
The collaboration is an impressive one. Peter Sluszkais is a New York-based animator focused on stop-motion and photo-based effects. Julia Pott is a versatile young English animator with a 2009 MA from the Royal College of Art. Guilherme Marcondes is a Brazilian illustrator and animator who has lived and worked in London and (currently) New York. Santa Maria is a directing team comprised of Josh Goodrich and David Hill whose eclectic work bridges styles and includes animation and live action film. Sluszka, Pott, Marcondes, and Santa Maria, respectively, directed four successive segments of the film, each containing four or five musical pieces. Sluszka's ultra-slow motion capture of exploding mushrooms and elegantly disseminating seed pods fades into Julia Pott's line art of wolves and foxes hovering in geometric constellations; then Guilherme Marcondes takes over with his renderings of skeletons caught among leafless branches and verdant human arms that unfurl like ferns. Santa Maria winds up with cosmic computer-generated vistas and cartoons of splintering bones. The various segments were curated by the visual arts collective Flux and the whole was produced by Hornet.
The Opening Night film of the San Francisco International Animation Festival, presented Thursday, November 11 at 7:30 pm at Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema in San Francisco.
Here Come the Waves: The Hazards of Love Visualized is available through iTUNES and was released in that form in December 2009.
Excerpt from Marcondes' section on YouTube.
Trailer.
Mai Mai Miracle (Sanbu Katabuchi 2009)
Sunao Katabuchi: MAI MAI MIRACLE (2009)
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Shinko, her grandfather, and Kiiko in Mai Mai Miracle
Facing harsh realities with magic and smiles in provincial Fifties Japan
Directed by a former assistant of the great Hayao Miyazaki, (he served as a scriptwriter of Miyazaki's Sherlock Hound and assistant director on his Kiki's Delivery Service), this anime film is Katabuchi's second feature, produced by the premier Madhouse animation house in Japan. Mai Mai Miracle is a charming, touching, and surprisingly complex story about two nine-year-old girls in Kokuga, a farming village (near a factory) in 1950's Japan developed from an autobiographical account by Nabuko Takagi. Though less visually rich than Miyazaki, this film is continually engaging in the way it enters the world of childhood without condescension but with the upbeat-ness in the face of troubles characteristic of anime.
The main character, Shinko (voiced by Mayuko Fukuda) is a free-spirited tomboy much influenced by the tales told her by her grandfather Nagako (Manami Honjou) of Sue, the town as it was called a thousand years ago. Her fantasies based on his lessons and stories lead her to believe she has access to her own special brand of healing magic she connects with her "mai mai," her cowlick in the middle of her forehead. Shinko has many fantasies, which include a lonely princess, Nagiko Kiyohara (Ei Morisako) -- derived from the 11th-century Japanese literary classic the Pillow Book of Sei Shōnagon, whom Shinko believes she's descended from and who is woven in and out of the story. Kiiko (voiced by Nako Mizusawa) is a shy, reserved new girl, daughter of a doctor, who's recently come to Shinko's school from Tokyo and has pale skin and city ways and a sadness because she's yet to get over the death of a mother she barely remembers. The two girls meet in third grade and quickly become great friends. Each helps the other. Shinko learns to deal with reality, and Kiiko learns to develop her imagination.
A lovely early episode depicts how Shinko visits Kiiko's relatively lavish house and wonders at its having two floors, and Kiiko is equally awed by Shinko's more traditional dwelling. Playing with other kids they make a dam and discover a red fish they name after the teacher they adore. The kids hero-worship an admirable policeman, praised by Shinko's grandpa and the father of one of the older boys. Both the policeman and the beloved teacher Hiraku have more dark and complex lives than the kids had realized, leading toward tragedy but also accommodation. There is a suicide, and Shinko feels wrong has been done that she must avenge; this leads her into contact with the seamy side of town and a discovery that things aren't as black and white as she had thought. The shocks and disappointments Shinko experiences cause her to realize that her magic may not be real. As we get to this part of the film it has become surprisingly complex. Neither Mai Mai Miracle nor the screenplay talks down to anybody, even though the playfulness and the ability to laugh are never lost.
What's most appealing and fascinating about this film is the way it oscillates between the real and the imaginary, the upbeat and the sad, while maintaining the deceptively simple surface of childhood. The drawing too is richer than might appear. It's often as elementary as a Fifties school book for young kids (Spot, Dick, Jane), yet the animation flows very smoothly and the style morphs from the bright scenes of the Kokuga wheat fields to the dark gangsterish precincts of the port, and when Shinko describes some of her imaginings to the audience or to Kiiko they initially take the form of simply animated, conceivably childish drawings, while the flashbacks to a thousand years ago have a hazy richness. Reaction shots are convincing, and the voicings are delicate and touching. The musical background is delicate and often unexpected. Katabuchi has made an animation that's traditional without being hackneyed at all. At the end, everything changes, and the two girls are no longer going to be together any more. A lot has happened. The best thing about the story is that it seems both surprising and inevitable. And its simplicity embodies a bipolar message about history and culture. As Ronnie Scheib's Variety review concludes: "Ultimately, 'Mai Mai Miracle' depicts Japan in the '50s, caught between an imperial past of rigid class distinction and its Western-influenced, caste-loose future. Kiiko's ability to channel an imperial princess while mourning her Westernized mother, and Shinko's realization that her classmate's father was not simply seduced by Western influences but carried the seed of his own destruction, sophisticatedly represent two sides of an ambivalent East/West fusion, conveyed with surprising clarity."
Released theatrically in Japan and South Korea in late 2009, Mai Mai Miracle has been shown in various international festivals in 2010. Seen and reviewed as part of the 2010 San Francisco International Animation Festival. Shown to the public Saturday, November 13, 12:00 pm at Landmark's Embarcadero Center Cinema.