February 2, 2009
Lone Star Attractions
In mid-March, I'll be moseying down to the 2009 SXSW film festival (a grand ol' Tex-Mex time I try to hit every year, not least for being a former Austinite and alumni filmmaker), and now that the full line-up was announced this past weekend, here's a taste of what to expect.
The Hip Bone is Connected to the Mumblebone
The m-word may unfortunately never die, but before pre-screening judgment is passed, let me say that I'm delighted whenever any facets of the DIY filmmaking community boost each other up: Andrew Bujalski appears in Dia Sokol's Sorry, Thanks, but his new film Beeswax will be in the mix, costarring Alex Karpovsky, whose third feature Trust Us, This Is All Made Up screens in the Emerging Visions category, as does David Lowery's St. Nick. Lowery costars in husband-wife team Joe Swanberg's Alexander the Last and Kris Swanberg's It Was Great, But I Was Ready to Come Home, and Barlow Jacobs (also in Joe and David's movies) has a bit part in Ry Russo-Young's You Won't Miss Me, as does Joe. Mark Duplass stars in Lynn Shelton's deservedly praised Humpday and Craig Johnson's True Adolescents, and while I'm sure as hell not drawing another chart, you practically need one.
Sundance Party, U.S.A.
Besides Humpday and You Won't Miss Me, some other notable Park City leftovers have made the cut, including Adventureland, Grace, Sin Nombre, Passing Strange, The Yes Men Fix the World, Burma VJ, The Immaculate Conception of Little Dizzle, We Live in Public, and one of my favorites, the impressive sci-fi drama Moon. Unlike some other large festivals that turn their nose in the air to non-premieres, I've long admired SXSW's commitment to showcasing remarkable films, regardless of where they have or haven't played before. Take note, programmers!
Root for the Underdogs
What I'm most looking forward to are the lil' gems that few people know about yet, which could have break-out potential. The Snake sold me on a Patton Oswalt recommendation and this brief synopsis, from a SF Weekly article: "a dark comedy about an inveterate womanizer in a post-feminist world, complete with a cameo by a screaming Margaret Cho." The website for the Japanese insect documentary Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo features a mesmerizing trailer showcasing some dazzling cinematography. Local boy Tim McCanlies (Secondhand Lions) will be world-premiering The Two Bobs, about video-game designers in search of their stolen software, who "plunge into the strange world of Christian Venture Capitalists, aged Dixie Mafia hoodlums and bizarre Internet Spammers that inhabit Austin," according to the Austin Chronicle. And what kind of guy would I be to not mention Boston Phoenix critic Gerald Peary's long-awaited For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism, which is sure to get press, unless all the critics down in Austin happen to be talking heads in his doc, and conflicts of interest mean Perry will be crying in his queso... I kid, I kid.
Posted by ahillis at February 2, 2009 9:43 AM
Just thinking. But isn't the incestuous, never-ending mumblecore presence at SXSW a pretty good example from the earlier post about getting into festivals via contacts...
Posted by: Fanucci at February 2, 2009 11:58 AMI don't know about that. Considering two of the films there played at the decidedly un-mumbly Sundance and a third has already been picked up by IFC, I don't think that's fair. (Ask me about this again after I see Mrs. Swanberg's film, which as of now, I know very little about.)
I also doubt there will be many stylistic or thematic overlaps between the films accounted for here, so the question remains: what is mumblecore, and does it still exist in 2009? If Andrew Bujalski made a sci-fi parable for $2-million, would anyone still associate him with that word? (Sadly, maybe.) Is Medicine for Melancholy an m-core film, simply because it involves twenty-something relationships and was shot on DV? (No.) It's funny how a word that means next to nothing can be so damning to anyone within its orbit, and those who are most dismissive haven't given chances to all the individual films anyway.
Festivals need to make money from ticket sales, too, so I doubt it's in SXSW's best interest to select films based on associations to other collaborators who aren't exactly household names. If they're worthy, they're worthy.
Posted by: Aaron Hillis at February 2, 2009 12:11 PMPlease.
Posted by: Fanucci at February 2, 2009 12:36 PMIf you want to take the sourpuss road of bitterness, be my guest. I'm keeping an open mind since I haven't yet seen the films in question.
Posted by: Aaron Hillis at February 2, 2009 12:44 PMNo sourpuss. No bitterness.
But don't tell me all those guys and their inexperienced wives and girlfriends are consistently chosen because they make consistently good films.
It's a scene. That's all. Everybody knows everybody.
Posted by: Fanucci at February 2, 2009 1:01 PMI agree with Fannucci, except s/he needs to go further in the critique. It's all Humpday. Dentler is gone and SXSW won't be the same. Just wait and see. Did you see the documentary line up? Pathetic. Fucking pathetic. Issue based films??? Bring Dentler back!
Posted by: Humday at February 2, 2009 2:29 PMI disagree with Fannucci very strongly. Lots of good films and lots of bad films are submitted to festivals every year. Films from both groups are accepted and films from both groups are rejected.
Largely I think it's a matter of taste-- of whether the festival programmer(s) liked or loved the film. I think it's really as simple as that.
And let me echo Mr. Hillis's point re: how it's not in the interest of a festival to select films based on associations to others who aren't household names. Having Joe Swanberg in your film is no guarantee that you'll get into SXSW or any other festival.
I know this because Mr. Swanberg (a gentleman and a prince) was in my most recent film and it did not make it into the SXSW line-up. I think the films are judged on their own merits. Now, I might disagree with the festival's judgement about the merits of my film-- and, obviously, I do!-- but to claim that SXSW is some kind of Exclusive Mumble-Bumble Social Club that crowds out everybody else is absurd on its face.
Posted by: Tom Russell at February 2, 2009 10:53 PMSXSW may have been the birthplace of the m-word but it's also generally been the home of American indie cinema, well after Sundance lost that crown. Aaron rightfully states that every indie film with 20-something actors/writers/directors should not be called mumblecore. I think it's time to move on (and I think the people involved in that accidental "movement" would be happiest of all).
By the way, I've been soliciting filmmakers with films screening at SXSW to contact me early in order to get coverage. This worked pretty well last year, since once I'm actually in Austin, I find it hard to actually get to a film. :)
Posted by: James McNally at February 7, 2009 7:08 PM




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