This is basically a continuation of this post. This is a very good time in Toronto for art films. It may even slightly surpass the mid 90s, which was a good time indeed. I still don't like TIFF policies (which did indeed shift post-COVID, and they were far more reasonable pre-COVID). Nonetheless, I was able to see pretty much all the Naruse I wanted. If it had been scheduled differently, I would have tried to watch Repast, but I guess I can watch it on DVD at some point this winter.
I guess there are a few SPOILERS here and there, so be warned...
TIFF also started a very compact Bunuel retrospective. As it happens, I was seeing Belle de Jour at the Revue (last night incidentally, and I'll include a few thoughts about it down-thread). Ages and ages ago, I saw Un chien andalou (the film he made with Dali) and don't really need to see it again. Now the first time through, I was only able to book a ticket to the late film Viridiana. I was frustrated with TIFF as usual, but just now I saw a few seats had opened up at most of the screenings, so I booked tickets for Diary of a Chambermaid, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and The Exterminating Angel, which certainly covers all the major films. I would have tried to see That Obscure Object of Desire (Bunuel's final film), but it only plays once, conflicting with Eric Rohmer's La Collectionneuse over at Paradise, and I expect I'll enjoy that more.
One of the more interesting things about the ending of Belle de Jour is that it is definitely a fantasy (not completely dissimilar to the "Love Conquers All" edit of Brazil, and I suspect that Bunuel was an important influence on Gilliam) but also that it could lead to a reading that the entire prostitution plot was a very elaborate fantasy (and none of it happened). I mean probably not, but it's at least possible. There are also two direct references to Godard's Breathless. First there is the male New York Daily Herald paper hawker, who shows up right as the two thugs are introduced. And then the shooting of Marcel is framed almost exactly as the shooting of Michel in Breathless, with the key exception that Marcel went out guns blazing and Michel is inadvertently caught up in his shooting death. This can't possibly be accidental.
I think I mentioned that I did see Godard's Contempt at the Revue but didn't actually care that much for it. I think I am basically immune to the charms of Godard...
It's possible that the single best movie I saw all month was Antonioni's La Notte. It was over at the Fox, and I did break my semi-serious vow not to go over there again, but it was worth it. And indeed hardly anyone showed up, so the shallow raked floor didn't matter. This film came out one year after Fellini's La Dolce Vita, and I think there are strong parallels between the two movies, though it's hard to say how far along Antonioni was with La Notte by the time he would have been able to see La Dolce Vita. Interestingly, apparently there was a version ready for the Italian censors in Nov. 1960, and La Dolce Vita was released in Feb. 1960. Of course, Mastroianni is in both, automatically linking the two. I think I actually like La Notte a bit better than La Dolce Vita, as it is just more focused. It's one of the only Antonioni films I actually like. After this screening, I stuck around and watched No Other Choice, a black comedy from South Korea about a fired factory foreman who kills off rivals for an opening at another paper company. I think the director may have missed a trick in not having the AI machinery kill him off accidentally at the end, perhaps when he unnecessarily hit the paper rolls with his baton, setting off some chain reaction...
The funniest movie I saw was Bottoms as part of Queer Cinema Club at the Paradise. This is basically Heathers mixed in with Mean Girls and of course Fight Club (though the point of starting the fight club is to get with hot cheerleaders, which is so Revenge of the Nerds...). Even though the weather was truly horrendous, everyone showed up, and it was a sold out screening! I'm certainly glad I made it. The series has managed to show some incredible films (as well as a few I strongly avoided...). I also enjoyed Mulholland Drive (which I barely got into), three or so Fassbinder movies, Zero Patience, 2 Almodovar films, and Touch of Pink. Oh and Kajillionaire, which I almost certainly wouldn't have seen without the club, and I enjoyed this a lot. (Same with Pat Mills's Guidance.)
I found the relationship between the slightly butch lesbian and the artistic/theatrical gay male in Can You Ever Forgive Me? reminded me a lot of the lesbians in my mother's circle who ran the AIDS crisis line in Detroit, and I felt moved by that. (Ah, memories...) Once in a while I am not able to make a Queer Cinema Club showing but then catch the film later, which is what happened for Law of Desire and Tangerine.
Despite fighting off a cold that makes me miserable, stuffing myself with cough drops, I just saw Galaxy Quest, which is so terrific. I'm going to make yet another trip out to the Revue on Friday to see Blake Edwards's Skin Deep, followed by Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. After that, De Palma's Blow Out at the Revue and 2046 at Paradise. But the somewhat obsessive desire to catch up with films may taper off a bit by April (and I end up seeing a lot more concerts and plays). I guess we'll see...








