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Month: May 2013

Saturday Night at the Movies: 2013 Seattle International Film Festival preview

Saturday Night at the Movies

2013 SIFF Preview

by Dennis Hartley



In case this has been keeping you up nights, I have been accredited for the Seattle International Film Festival. The festival kicks off May 16th and runs through June 9th. Navigating such an event is no easy task, even for a dedicated film buff. SIFF is showing 272 feature films over a 26 day period. That must be great for independently wealthy slackers, but for those of us who work for a living (*cough*), it’s not easy to find the time and energy to catch 11 films a day (I did the math). The trick is developing a sixth sense for films “in your wheelhouse” (in my case, embracing my OCD and channeling it like a cinematic dowser.)  That in mind, here are a few titles on my “to-do” list for 2013:

Of particular interest to Hullabaloo readers, there are a fair number of intriguing documentary offerings with a political bent. The film I am most eager to see in this category is We Steal Secrets: The Story of Wikileaks from Alex Gibney (who won an Oscar for Taxi to the Dark Side).  Government accountability also seems likely to take center stage in Richard Rowley’s Dirty Wars. Rowley follows investigative journalist Jeremy Scahill on his quest to collate a history of the Joint Special Operations Command (“Are you an assassin, Willard?”). Speaking of shameful chapters in U.S. history, Our Nixon promises a unique retrospective on the Tricky One’s reign. Director Penny Lane mixes up snippets of the infamous secret Oval Office recordings, archival interviews with H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman and Dwight Chapin and privately shot Super8 footage taken by those three Nixon aides during their White House tenure (the trailer is a hoot). I can’t wait to see Jacob Kornbluth’s Inequality for All, featuring the ever-erudite ex-Labor Secretary Robert Reich and being billed as “An Inconvenient Truth…for the economy”.

Examinations of gender politics and culture wars abound in this year’s documentary offerings. After Tiller is director Martha Shane’s portrait of the four (not a typo) remaining physicians in America willing to perform third-trimester abortions in the wake of Dr. George Tiller’s assassination in 2009. In Anita, filmmaker Frieda Mock serves up a “then and now” perspective on the socio-political ramifications of (now) law professor Anita Hill’s watershed testimony at the 1991 Clarence Thomas hearings regarding sexual harassment in the workplace. And in Forbidden Voices, Swiss director Barbara Miller profiles three “cyber feminists” from Cuba, China and Iran who continue speaking truth to power (via blogosphere) despite the looming threat from their respective governments.

For his documentary The Act of Killing, Joshua Oppenheimer set off to Indonesia, initially to track down surviving victims of the government-sanctioned genocide that resulted in the deaths of over 1 million alleged “communists” during the 1960s. The only witnesses willing to appear on camera turned out to be some of the perpetrators-former “death squad” leaders, who even helpfully volunteered to re-enact some of their atrocities, B-movie style. The film has been called “powerful, surreal and frightening,” by Werner Herzog. And in what sounds like another example of life imitating art imitating life, there is Closed Curtain, the latest from Iranian director Jafar Panahi (This is Not a Film). In this “fictional” film (partially shot in his own home, where he is currently living under house arrest for “making anti-government propaganda” and “banned” from filmmaking until 2030) Panahi casts co-director Kambuzia Partovi…as a writer in hiding.

And now for something completely different. I always look forward to SIFF’s “Face the Music” showcase. Several music docs in this year’s series have caught my eye. Pussy Riot-A Punk Prayer focuses on three members of Russian president Vladimir Putin’s least favorite “feminist punk-rock collective”…specifically the young women who are currently facing 40 years in prison for performing a 40-second theater piece called “Punk Prayer”. Her Aim is True recounts the fascinating career of prolific Seattle-based rock music photographer Jini Dellaccio. A Band Called Death explores the unexpected revival of a Detroit-based trio who recorded a self-produced proto-“Afro-punk” album circa 1974 (yielding a single that became highly coveted by collectors) then sunk into obscurity. I’m quite excited about Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me, which profiles the seminal 70s Memphis-based power pop band led by the late great Alex Chilton (I did a tribute here).

OK, enough Reality, already. The primary reason we go to the movies is to escape from it, nu? And nothing screams “escape” like a totally blown midnight movie. The synopsis for Argentine director Dario Nardi’s Sadourni’s Butterflies contains at least three key phrases that immediately pique my interest: “circus dwarf”, “crime of passion” and “he finds work dubbing fetish films” (actually, they had me at “circus dwarf”). From the UK, there’s Cockneys vs. Zombies…one of those high concept titles that I assume leaves little to the imagination as to what ensues. Matthias Hoene’s film is billed as a “riotous splatter comedy” (’nuff said). Goltzius and the Pelican Co. is the latest bit of weirdness from veteran UK director Peter Greenaway. It is a 16th-century tale based on the life of a “notorious Dutch engraver” who is commissioned to “stage erotic dramatizations of the Old Testament”. And Die Wand (“The Wall”), from Austrian director Julian Roman Polsler, centers on a woman (Maria Gedeck) who returns from a pleasant summer nature walk with her dog to find herself blocked from leaving the forest by an invisible “wall”.

I’m always a sucker for a good noir/crime/mystery thriller, and several selections are on my radar. From Hong Kong, co-directors Longman Leung and Sunny Luk weave a complex tale of “police corruption, criminal conspiracies and political infighting” in Cold War. The French thriller Flight of the Storks is making its North American premiere at SIFF. Jan Kounen’s film begins with the mysterious death of an amateur ornithologist, which leads a Swiss detective on a globe-trotting trail of carnage that seems to be following the migratory path of storks (I must say, that is a pretty original hook). From “Nollywood” director Obi Emelonye comes Last Flight to Abuja, a “multi-character potboiler filled with romance, blackmail and murder” that all takes place on a commercial plane flight (sounds like it could be the Nigerian answer to Airport). Sofia Coppola’s Bling Ring (this year’s Closing Night selection) is based on the true story of five celebrity-obsessed L.A. teens who committed a series of Hollywood mansion burglaries.

You want drama? There’s plenty of that. French-Algerian director Rachid Bouchareb’s UK production Just Like a Woman is a Thelma and Louise style road movie about two Chicago women, (each with their own urgent reason to blow town) who end up travelling together to Santa Fe to compete in a belly dancing competition. A competitive event also provides the backdrop for an Australian import called The Rocket. Kim Mordaunt’s film tells the story of a 10 year-old Laotian boy who is believed to be a “bad luck charm” for his village. Determined to redeem his standing in the community, he sets about building what he hopes to be the winning entry at the local Rocket Festival. The director was apparently given access to ancient Laotian festivals and rituals rarely granted to outsiders. Unifinished Song is a promising dramedy from UK director Paul Andrews Williams, mainly due to the presence of Terence Stamp and Vanessa Redgrave. When Redgrave’s character is forced to drop out of the local senior’s choir due to illness, her cranky but loving hubby (Stamp), who can’t carry a tune in a bucket, reluctantly steps in as her fill.

And lest we forget to laugh, I’ve earmarked several selections in a lighter vein. Fanie Fourie’s Lobola looks to be a modern South African take on Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? Directed by Henk Pretorius, it’s a romantic culture-clash comedy of manners concerning an impending marriage between an Afrikaans man named Fanie and a Zulu woman named Dinky, complicated by Fanie’s obligation to first negotiate “Lobola” (a South African dowry) with Dinky’s family. A Lady in Paris stars the great Jeanne Moreau (lovely to see she’s still working) as a crotchety patrician who strikes up an unlikely friendship with a provincial middle-aged Estonian woman who has been hired to help take care of her. I’m 99.9% sure that Nitin Kakkar’s Filmistaan is a first…a comedy featuring Pakistani terrorists. An aspiring Indian actor named Sunny tries to get a foot in the biz by taking a gig with an American crew filming a commercial near the Pakistan border. Mistaken for an American, he is kidnapped by terrorists, who don’t realize the gaffe until they’ve already schlepped him into Pakistan. They decide to hold him anyway, where Sunny uses his love of everything Bollywood to ingratiate himself with the locals.

SIFF also offers a number of selections in the “family-friendly” department. Wolf Children, which looks to be a kinder, gentler than usual take on the “werewolf” motif, is the latest effort from one of my favorite anime directors, Mamoru Hosada (I really dug his last film Summer Wars, which I reviewed here). From Germany, there’s another promising animated feature called Moon Man. Described as a “warm, fuzzy blanket the whole family can share”, it concerns a trip to Earth by a bored and lonely (wait for it) “moon man” who is initially perceived as a harbinger of an “alien invasion”, but soon proves quite to be quite the opposite (shades of The Day the Earth Stood Still). And finally, no SIFF would be complete without a classic revival, and this year they have a doozey-a spanking new 35mm print of Harold Lloyd’s 1923 silent comedy, Safety Last!

I can’t guarantee that I will catch every film that I’d like to, gentle reader- but you will be the first to receive a full report, beginning with my Saturday, May 18th post. And obviously, I’ve barely scratched the surface of the catalog tonight. So in the meantime, visit the SIFF website for more info about the 2013 films, events and the festival guests.

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Silly liberals wearing crowns

Silly liberals wearing crowns

by digby

Watch Glenn Greenwald irritate the hell out of Bill Maher last night with his “silly liberal” opinion that Islam is not some kind of uniquely violent religion — and that US foreign policy might just be partly to blame for its believers’ hostility towards America.

I would love to know why Maher thinks that making this (to me, obvious) observation makes liberals “feel good.” I can’t speak for anyone but myself, but it makes me feel like shit.

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Who cares about a buncha stoopid gurlz anyway?

Who cares about a buncha stoopid gurlz anyway?


by digby

In case there are any people left out there who doubt that men and women are treated differently on the internet (and in life) check out this post:

Nine months ago, a man posted this otherwise unremarkable photo of himself to the r/pics subreddit with the headline “This is me the being dope sick [sic] when i quit heroin. 6 months and counting of being clean“. It got 1450 total upvotes. The top 5 comments, in order (not counting one comment from the OP): 

1.Congratulations man. Thats no easy feat. Heroin has taken many a life. Good to see somone beat it
(380 total upvotes) 

2.“6 months and counting of being clean Datestamp 3/16/11″ Was there a relapse in there?
(268 total upvotes) 

3.I know that look. I’ve made it myself. When everything hurts all at once, you can’t tell if you’re burning hot or freezing cold and every fibre of your being is shouting at you to stop being a fuckhead and feed it what it thinks it needs… stay strong, my man. if I can do it, you can do it. clean for a little over 20 years, now. a great job, lovely house, two beautiful boys and a superhero for a wife. it was worth every agonising second to come out on top and rebuild my life. I am consumed with respect and admiration for you. keep going.
(227 total upvotes) 

4.Awesome job! I have 4.5 months clean. Just remember: that’s the last time you have to be dopesick.Ever (106 total upvotes)

5.I don’t know you, but I love you for staying clean. It gives me hope for my brother.
(75 total upvotes.)

Three days ago, a woman posted this otherwise unremarkable photo of herself to the r/pics subreddit with the headline “Been clean from heroin for 2 months and this is me today“. It got 608 total points. The top 5 comments, in order:
1.I’ve never done heroin, here is a picture of a pair of old shoes. [links to a random photo of shoes]
(2077 total upvotes) 

2. Reddit just upvoted some girl’s mirror shot to the front page. Holy fuck, guys
(1785 total upvotes) 

3. I’ve been clean from heroin for 24 years, nobody upvotes my mirror pics.
(1282 total upvotes) 

4. I don’t get it. This is just a picture of a person. What is interesting about this picture?
(405 total upvotes) 

5. 9 outta 10 would bang. With protection.

Having once been widely assumed by many on the internet to be male, I know this phenomenon intimately. My favorite personal illustration is the blogger who said that he just couldn’t understand why my writing immediately went downhill the minute I revealed I was a woman.

It isn’t all in our heads.  Really.

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Debt follies, continued: guess what America? You’ve been had.

Debt follies, continued


by digby

There’s been a lot of good stuff on Paul Krugman’s blog over the past few days so if you haven’t checked in over there in a while try to do so this week-end. I’m particularly enjoying the idea that the brilliant hedge fund guys might have lost their shirts because their bets on the need for human suffering didn’t pay off. It reminds me of those end-of-the-world cults — which always just pick another day of doom the morning after their prediction turns out to have been BS.

But aside from that, Krugman posted something last week that I just want to post on this blog for posterity:

Bad news for Dr. Evil fans: the days of a ONE TRILLION DOLLAR deficit are over. In fact, the deficit is falling fast. 

Some readers may recall the ridicule heaped on the people at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities when they produced estimates suggesting that any notion of a debt/deficit crisis was all wrong. It’s turning out, however, that they were probably overestimating debt growth. The deficit is fading, and debt as a medium-term (meaning up to 10 years) issue has largely gone away. 

This is not good news — or not unambiguously good news, at any rate. A deficit falling to probably less than 5 percent of GDP this year and well below that next year is MUCH TOO LOW for an economy whose private sector is still engaged in a vicious circle of deleveraging.  

Oh, by the way, it is now 26 months since Bowles and Simpson predicted a US fiscal crisis within two years.

This is what comes of buying into a bogus consensus that deficits are the worlds greatest threats to human kind and that the pursuit of Grand Bargains based on projections too far in the future to have in meaning is a worthwhile way to spend vast amounts of political capital. So here we are, locked into more austerity while millions remain unemployed.

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Warren’s fast start

Warren’s fast start

by digby

Here is an excellent profile of Elizabeth Warren in today’s LA Times. Seems she’s causing quite a bit of agitation among the financial elites. I couldn’t be more delighted:

The attention Warren is drawing — video clips of her first Banking Committee hearing went viral on YouTube — could catapult her even further. Some liberals have begun touting her as a potential 2016 presidential candidate.

“She has maximized the influence and attention that a freshman senator can get,” said Jaret Seiberg, a senior policy analyst with financial services firm Guggenheim Partners. “Now, when we look at issues of too-big-to-fail and of consumer protection, people want to know what Elizabeth Warren has to say.”

The fast start by Warren, one of the few politicians to embrace the Occupy Wall Street movement, has confirmed the fears of some in the financial industry that she wouldn’t hesitate to criticize them from her new, higher-profile position.

Warren’s sharp rhetoric is “certainly harmful to our industry,” said Ballard Cassady, president of the Kentucky Bankers Assn.

Oh, boo fucking hoo. The poor put-upon bankers and master of the universe just cannot get a break. Well, except for their ill-gotten billions, but other than that it’s been just hell.

I am hearing lots of “questions” from establishment liberals about Warren’s aggressive style being unhelpful because it’s ginning up populist resentment (and lord knows, we can’t have that!) My answer to that is, “yeah, whatever.” The centrist Democrat experiment in “market liberalism” and appeasement politics has been shown to be an epic failure. We are on the verge of losing the American middle class and have succeeded in growing poverty. Well done, all around.

It’s time to change direction and Warren is one of the few who both personally understands the issues and the politics of this new era. If that doesn’t go down well among many of those who have invested their lives in the idea that left populism is dirty (or even that straight-up liberalism is a big fat political loser) well, too bad. As far as I’m concerned, she is the future. Get on board or get out of the way.

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No begging necessary, they’re all too eager for the new business

No begging necessary, they’re all too eager for the new business

by digby

The Republicans are trying to sabotage the health care reform implementation one step at a time:

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has gone, hat in hand, to health industry officials, asking them to make large financial donations to help with the effort to implement President Obama’s landmark health-care law, two people familiar with the outreach said.

Her unusual fundraising push comes after Congress repeatedly rejected the Obama administration’s requests for additional funds to set up the Affordable Care Act, leaving HHS to implement the president’s signature legislative accomplishment on what officials have described as a shoestring budget.

Over the past three months, Sebelius has made multiple phone calls to health industry executives, community organizations and church groups and asked that they contribute whatever they can to nonprofit groups that are working to enroll uninsured Americans and increase awareness of the law, according to an HHS official and an industry person familiar with the secretary’s activities. Both spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk openly about private discussions.

An HHS spokesperson said Sebelius was within the bounds of her authority in asking for help.

You would think this would please Republicans to no end, wouldn’t you? No taxpayer money involved in educating people about how to access a new government sponsored program. The job creators can do it themselves! After all, the private sector is going to be the big financial beneficiary of the new program, so it’s all good.

Not so fast:

But Republicans charged that Sebelius’s outreach was improper because it pressured private companies and other groups to support the Affordable Care Act. The latest controversy has emerged as the law faces a string of challenges from GOP lawmakers in Washington and skepticism from many state officials across the country.

“To solicit funds from health-care executives to help pay for the implementation of the President’s $2.6 trillion health spending law is absurd,” Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) said in a statement. “I will be seeking more information from the Administration about these actions to help better understand whether there are conflicts of interest and if it violated federal law.”

That’s so hilarious it took me a minute to catch my breath from laughing. As if private industry and health executives are reluctant partners in the health care reforms. The health industry is thrilled with the Affordable Care Act, they were in the room every step of the way helping to write it. They don’t need any pressure to support it — in fact, I feel quite sure they already had plans to “reach out” to all the new customers who will be required to buy their health insurance and access their health care institutions as a result of the plan. It’s called advertising, and they do it all the time.

So, while it may not be quite how the administration would prefer that it, I feel quite sure that “outreach” will get done whether Kathleen Sebelius is forced to beg for money or not. And there isn’t anything Orrin Hatch can do about it.

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It’s possible to hold criminal heads of state accountable after all, by @DavidOAtkins

It’s possible to hold criminal heads of state accountable after all

by David Atkins

Guatemala looks backward, not forward:

A Guatemalan court on Friday found former dictator Efrain Rios Montt guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity during the bloodiest phase of the country’s 36-year civil war.

He was sentenced to 50 years in prison on the genocide charge and 30 years for crimes against humanity. It was the first time a former head of state had been found guilty of genocide in his or her own country.

Rios Montt, 86, took power after a coup in 1982, and is accused of implementing a scorched-earth policy in which troops massacred thousands of indigenous villagers. He entered the court on Friday to boos and cries of “Justicia!” or justice.

Prosecutors say Rios Montt turned a blind eye as soldiers used rape, torture and arson to try to rid Guatemala of leftist rebels during his 1982-1983 rule, the most violent period of a 1960-1996 civil war in which as many as 250,000 people died.

Montt engaged in his murderous spree under the approving and watchful eye of the Reagan Administration, which supplied him with an arsenal of weapons with which to conduct his purge:

Given Ríos Montt’s staunch anticommunism and ties to the United States, the Reagan administration continued to support the general and his regime, paying a visit to Guatemala City in December 1982. During a meeting with Ríos Montt on December 4, Reagan declared: “President Ríos Montt is a man of great personal integrity and commitment. … I know he wants to improve the quality of life for all Guatemalans and to promote social justice.”

President Ronald Reagan claimed Guatemala’s human rights conditions were improving and used this to justify several major shipments of military hardware to Rios Montt; $4 million in helicopter spare parts and $6.3 million in additional military supplies in 1982 and 1983 respectively. The decision was taken in spite of records concerning human rights violations, by-passing the approval from Congress.

Fortunately, Guatemalans had the good sense yesterday to know that looking backward for accountability for the crimes of those in high office is the only way to truly move forward as a nation. It will be a tremendous failure of justice when Dick Cheney leaves this earth never having paid the piper for his own reckless crimes.

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God hates us for our freedom

God hates us for our freedom

by digby

I guess Michele Bachman has answered the question as to why “they” hate us: they are just following God’s orders:

Bachmann: It’s no secret that our nation may very well be experiencing the hand of judgment. It’s no secret that we all are concerned that our nation may be in a time of decline. If that is in fact so, what is the answer? The answer is what we are doing here today: humbling ourselves before an almighty God, crying out to an almighty God, saying not of ourselves but you, would you save us oh God? We repent of our sins, we turn away from them, we seek you, we seek your ways. That’s something that we’re doing today, that we did on the National Day of Prayer, it’s something that we have chosen to do as well on another landmark day later this year on September 11. Our nation has seen judgment not once but twice on September 11. That’s why we’re going to have ‘9/11 Pray’ on that day. Is there anything better that we can do on that day rather than to humble ourselves and to pray to an almighty God?

There was a time when people were pilloried by the right for even suggesting that the United States might have been “asking for it.” (Remember this poor obscure professor who thought tenure meant you had academic freedom?)

What I find interesting about this is that Michelle Bachman is a big Christian — but she seems to be saying that God is Muslim. At least one could easily assume that he must be sympathetic to Muslims, don’t you think? Either that or God is a comedian, messing with poor Michele’s head and laughing behind her back.

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Let the 2016 campaign begin

Let the 2016 campaign begin

by digby

Here we go. Karl Rove is on the case:

I have no idea whether Hicks is a disgruntled wingnut or if he’s telling the truth. His rather sanctimonious testimony yesterday doesn’t exactly lend itself to credibility, but who knows? I assume that at some point, someone will have the balls to speak out publicly without the shield of anonymity and we’ll find out.

I also don’t think it matters. Libya was a war zone and therefore, a dangerous place and the fact that American embassy personnel got killed there is tragic, but unsurprising and hardly unprecedented. The administration had no reason to cover up anything — until the right turned it into their White(water) Whale, no one would have ever suspected a cover-up was even necessary.

If you are looking for a level-headed take on the matter that won’t make your head hurt, check out this brief re-cap by Kevin Drum.

h/t to Greg Mitchell

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Somebody hasn’t worked in the private sector in a very long long time

Somebody hasn’t worked in the private sector in a very long long time

by digby

Here’s a perfect example of why most people know in their gut that Washington is full of a bunch of out-of-touch elites who haven’t the vaguest clue about how the constituents actually live.

I give you Mitch McConnell talking about the scourge of Obamacare today:

“Women could be forced off plans they currently have and like in order to get cancer screenings or other preventive care.”

That’s terrible. Except for the fact that it happens virtually every time you change jobs, it would be quite the scandal. After all, the vast majority of Americans often have to change plans, get new doctors, find new pharmacies, all of that when they change employers.

And guess what, sometimes it results in … a better plan! And yes, sometimes, unfortunately, it results in a worse plan. The good news is that under Obamacare, all plans are going to have to cover basic screenings and preventive care so when you change plans it’s less likely that you’ll lose something you already have.

So Mitch McConnell is full of it as usual. But them he’s been on the very generous federal health plan for decades which allows you to stay on the same insurance if you want to no matter what job you have in the government. Out here in the world of the job creators, “switching plans” is an unfortunate fact of life. I have no doubt that a lot of people would love to just have one plan and be able to keep it their whole lives no matter who they work for or where they live. Sadly, nobody cares to create a health care system that could do that. Least of all, Mitch McConnell. Because socialism.

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