Sunday, February 21, 2010
Synecdoche, New York
Last night we watch Synecdoche, New York, a 2008 film written and directed by Charlie Kaufman.
While there were interesting moments, well-observed and finely-crafted dialogue, and existential insight scattered liberally throughout Synecdoche, New York, as well as some great acting from Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Samantha Morton, Dianne Wiest, and many others, I think it was a disastrous failure as a film.
I really enjoyed Adaptation and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, which Kaufman wrote but did not direct (I'm not quite so keen on Being John Malkovich, which he also wrote). They are ambitious films and achieve what they aim for - complex, thoughtful, funny mediations on life, representation, and the blurring of each of these into the other. And I think there was a similarly good film - perhaps even a great film - trying to get out of Synecdoche, New York, but for whatever reason Kaufman did not manage it.
Perhaps his success means he no longer has people around him who will challenge his creative calls, perhaps he really needs someone else (like Michel Gondry or Spike Jonze) to bring his ideas to complete fruition, perhaps he's just a better screenwriter than director (this is was debut film) - who knows? Ultimately, its unimportant. This film does not work. Many seem to have read its shortcomings as postmodern ingenuity, but I have to disagree. Synecdoche, New York was over-long, boring, rudderless, and confused. Less than the sum of its parts. That this description chimes well with the view the film gives us of the main character's life - and so, life in general - does not begin redeem it.
Monday, February 01, 2010
About time!
Not sure when it was updated, but I've just switched to the new style blog editor, which allows you to insert pictures properly - the crappy functionality for adding pictures has been driving me mental! I'll celebrate by inserting the following picture exactly where I want it:
Ooh, you have no idea how fancy and easy that was. Good work, Blogger.com!
That little cartoon is the somewhat mysterious announcement of Joanna Newsom's new album, in case you're wondering. You can click on it for a closer look.
Ooh, you have no idea how fancy and easy that was. Good work, Blogger.com!
That little cartoon is the somewhat mysterious announcement of Joanna Newsom's new album, in case you're wondering. You can click on it for a closer look.
31 January 2010 - Joanna Newsom at The Paramount, Wellington NZ

Despite a ridiculous time spent, for no apparent reason, queueing to get in, it was great to see another Joanna Newsom show here in Wellington, NZ.
She played a set lasting a shade under two hours long and comprised almost entirely of new material from her third album, Have One On Me, which is released on 23 February. Apart from fascinating versions of 'Bridges and Balloons', 'Inflammatory Writ', 'The Book of Right-on', 'Peach, Plum, Pear', and 'Emily' it was all new.
Someone at a recent Australian show, at Sidney Opera House, videoed three of the tracks she also played here in New Zealand yesterday: check it out. The tracklist for the whole show looks pretty similar although the order looks a little different:
SIDNEY SETLIST
01 "Jack Rabbits (Love You Again)"
02 "Bridges And Balloons"
03 "Have One On Me"
04 "Ribbon Bows"
05 "In California"
06 "Easy"
97 "Inflammatory Writ"
08 "Soft As Chalk"
09 "Autumn"
10 "Emily"
11 "Peach, Plum, Pear"
12 "'81"
13 "The Book Of Right-On"
----
14 "Colleen"
Assuming these are the real titles, she definitely played "Jack Rabbits', 'Easy', and 'Soft as Chalk' at the Wellington show. The only one of the new songs given a definite name was called 'Occident', which doesn't seem to appear here (or not under that name). As this video is apparently playing the song '81' I'm pretty sure she didn't play that last night....
The word on the web seems to be that it will be a 3xCD album - given the amount of new material she played that doesn't seem unlikely.
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