Saturday, December 8, 2007

the "death" of mumblecore

My friend Russ turned me on to an article in the latest issue of Film Comment called The Death of Mumblecore. Take a gander here if you're so inclined. With such a provocative title, I was very interested in reading this article which I immediately could not help but take issue with. How can a "movement" that's not really a "movement" already be dead?

I did find some of the information rather interesting, agreed with some of the comments, and whole-heartedly took issue with others. Basically, the author explains that the mumblecore "movement" is a creation of marketing, a ploy of film festival programming, an attempt to brand these films as the hot new thing so that they would do better as part of a group than they could on their own.

Well, okay. I always got the impression anyway that filmmakers branded with the label were always kind of puzzled by it, even put off by it, as well. It reminds me of another much-maligned, commercially-coined genre of which I have been an unapologetic follower: emocore music, more colloquially known as 'emo.' A label which is unwanted at best and derisive at worst, which no one can accurately define and almost no one is willing to use to define themselves. Most musicians slapped with the emo label would probably tell you that they don't know what it means either, and they they just make the music they want to make, man. Let the market, which needs everything to be easily classified and defined, make those distinctions. Such is the same with filmmakers of the mumblecore movement.

The emo genre and mumblecore have much in common. Products of both get an inordinate amount of shit for being self-indulgent works of self-absorbed people. And in some cases I'm sure that's a valid criticism. That said, I take issue with the following point of the article:
The mumbler with the loudest mouth and the director of three defining mumblecore features—Kissing on the Mouth (05), LOL (06), and the aforementioned Hannah—is Swanberg, who commented on GreenCine last year that his work “is not about seclusion, it’s just a reflection of the white, hipster neighborhood I live in.” Deep-throating his own foot even further, he told Filmmaker magazine (in the Spring ’07 issue) that he didn’t feel he had “anything to say right now about the Iraq war. The story of my life and my friends’ lives are the ones I can tell most completely.” That Swanberg believes that his life and those of his friends are separate from the war or the global meltdown that is upon us seems to me reason enough to bring back the draft. I wouldn’t take these pronouncements seriously, were they not borne out by movies that are just as smug and blatantly lazy.
Emphasis is mine. I don't think every film, or every work of art, for that matter, needs to be a treatise on the current geo-political state of the world, or contribute to any kind of political debate. Or, for that matter, be relevant to anything at all. I take the author's point that young people feel separate from the war and uninterested in current events, but you can't fault the guy for making films about what he wants to make films about. I find this criticism just unfair and mean-spirited.

The author makes no secret of her dislike for Joe Swanberg or his films, but seems to really like both Andrew Bujalski and Adam Katz, calling them the "break-out talents" of mumblecore. I can't say anything about Katz, since his two films, Dance Party USA and Quiet City haven't come out on DVD yet and I missed them at IFC in August. But I can see how the latter two perhaps have more emphasis on "craft" than Swanberg. Perhaps.

I don't like placing value-judgments on films. They are what they are. And I couldn't help but have a gut-reaction to the article based off of the provocative title alone. I wanted to take issue with it before I even read it. Hannah Takes the Stairs elicited genuine emotion when I saw it, and inspired me to do my own work. And I'm not the only one. What else can you ask from a film? Call it whatever you want, but it's definitely not dead.

EDIT: Oh, I also wanted to say congratulations to the Duplass Brothers (who I'm sure will never read this) for their new film, Baghead, getting accepted into Sundance.

Friday, December 7, 2007

resignation and infamy

Today was my last day of work. I was caught off guard by a wave of extreme emotions, not because I was sad to leave the place, but because I realized that I was quitting a decent job and trading it in to explore parts unknown. (Actually, when I say it like that, it sounds awesome.) But you get the idea. I feel liberated, excited, and terrified. I wasn't expecting so much of the terrified, but I guess I should have seen it coming.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

course correction

So, well, hmm. Six months since my last entry. For whatever reason, my desire to blog about my life and goings-on waned pretty quickly, but now I feel the need to do so again, so here we are. Short version: I got a job, left for a better job, and am now leaving that job too.

Working as a video editor from 9 to 5 (9 to 6:00, actually) five days a week was an interesting experience. This atmosphere of this particular place didn't really jibe with my vibe so-to-speak, and the attitudes of my bosses were taking their toll and I decided it was time to go. In retrospect, I'm almost glad the environment was as negative as it was. Because that was the only way I was going to let myself throw away the security of a steady paycheck and daily routine and pursue what I really want...which is the really hard part. It all comes back to the same place in the end, really. I am not going to be happy until I'm really doing what I want to do. Really doing it.

Back in August I saw a movie called Hannah Takes the Stairs at the IFC Center in New York. It was a small story about 20-somethings and their relationships, shot on video and heavily improvised. It reminded me of a Cassavetes film. Afterward I got really energized because this was exactly the kind of filmmaking I wanted to do, and these guys were out there actually doing it. When I got home I was looking online for information about the director, Joe Swanberg, and his other movies. This led me to discover a film "movement" that's been dubbed mumblecore, or sometimes slackavetes. (I put "movement" in quotes because it's not really so much a movement as it is a bunch of young filmmakers who are making movies about issues and people that are relevant to them in a stripped-down, minimalist style. More on this later.) Other filmmakers that have been lumped into this movement are Andrew Bujalski, Adam Katz, and The Duplass Brothers. In an odd coincidence, these films have also inspired this girl, who once interviewed my partners and I about our film company in Binghamton. Weird, huh?

Anyway, lots more stuff to come from me soon. For right now, I have to go to work. Four days left...