From the daily archives:

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Ibid

by James McNally on March 15, 2008 · 1 comment

in Film Festivals, SXSW

Ibid

Ibid (2008, Director: Russell Friedenberg): Billed as a sort of road movie about two escaped mental patients on a quest from God to write “new com­mand­ments” before the world ends, Ibid is actu­ally a mess of styles and tech­niques that thinks it’s being clever. As a first fea­ture, the film could be for­given for the bor­row­ings from other dir­ectors and other dec­ades. But when it becomes self-referential (are the two escapees simply acting in a play?), it loses any nar­rative thread com­pletely and we end up lit­er­ally wan­dering in the desert with a cast of crazy people.

Ibid reminded me quite a bit of Roger Corman’s Gas-s-s-s! (review), only more pre­ten­tious and mys­ti­fying. I saw this with two friends and all three of us fell asleep for at least part of the film.

Official site for the film

5/10(5/10)

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Joy Division

Joy Division (2007, Director: Grant Gee): I wanted to catch this back at TIFF in September, but saw Anton Corbijn’s Control (review) instead. The two films essen­tially com­plete each other, and seeing this after Corbijn’s dra­matic film made me appre­ciate how closely that film hewed to the facts. And seeing footage of Ian Curtis per­forming made Sam Riley’s per­form­ance that much more eerily com­pel­ling in retrospect.

Gee fash­ions his film around the image of the chan­ging city of Manchester. He points out expli­citly how many of the land­marks in the life of the band no longer exist. Sadly, this also applies to the people them­selves. Manager Rob Gretton and engineer Martin Hannett are no longer with us, nor is radio DJ and sup­porter John Peel. Most poignantly, Tony Wilson, who appears in the film, died in August 2007. The images of trans­form­a­tion describe the career of Joy Division espe­cially well; after the sui­cide of Ian Curtis, the three remaining mem­bers decided to change their name to New Order and keep going. Just as Manchester rose from the rubble of its indus­trial past, New Order became one of the most suc­cessful British groups of the 80s and 90s. It started so much more inauspiciously.

Inspired by the punk of the Sex Pistols, Joy Division (ori­gin­ally called Warsaw) formed in 1977 and quickly gelled around the mag­netic figure of Ian Curtis. The film brings together lots of old per­form­ance footage in addi­tion to inter­views with the sur­viving band mem­bers. Especially wel­come is the con­tri­bu­tion of Annik Honoré, Curtis’ Belgian girl­friend, who still seems deeply affected by his death. She is still incred­ibly beau­tiful and embodies the soph­ist­ic­a­tion that made some of the other band mem­bers a bit nervous.

Gee also spices up some audio-only inter­views with motion graphics and oth­er­wise mixes up his methods to keep the audi­ence inter­ested. It was under­stand­able but still dis­ap­pointing that Deborah Curtis’ (Ian’s widow) wasn’t fea­tured, though there were a few written quo­ta­tions fea­tured on-screen (from her bio­graphy Touching From A Distance, I assume).

It’s par­tic­u­larly fit­ting for me to be reviewing a film about a great band in the middle of a music fest­ival where more than 1,500 bands are playing in the space of a week. Among so many hard-working and tal­ented musi­cians, this film makes the achieve­ment of four working-class lads from Manchester that much more impressive. Gee’s film has given me a better appre­ci­ation of the band, and of Corbijn’s film in par­tic­ular. They should be sold as a set, I think.

Official site for the film

8/10(8/10)

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