Category Archive: Uncategorized

  1. INTERVIEW: DIRECTOR MIKE BLIZZARD TALKS ABOUT HIS NEW FILM ALSO STARRING AUSTIN

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    AFS is excited to present ALSO STARRING AUSTIN, a documentary that tells the story of Austin’s history and enduring culture by using scenes from locally shot films. We had the opportunity to speak with director Mike Blizzard about his new film. Join us at the AFS Cinema on February 22 at 7:30 p.m. and February 23 at 4 p.m. for screenings with special guests in attendance.

    Mike Blizzard is President and co-founder of Blizco Productions and the producer of the award-winning NO NO: A DOCKUMENTARY, which premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival and has been licensed by Showtime, Netflix, and ESPN. Mike is a former board member of the Austin Film Society and served two terms as Board President.

    Pictured above is a behind-the-scenes interview with Wiley Wiggins (DAZED & CONFUSED) at the field that was used as a shooting location in DAZED & CONFUSED.

    WERE THERE ANY DISCOVERIES YOU HAD WHEN RESEARCHING FILMS MADE IN AUSTIN?

    There were tons of discoveries. Honestly I had no idea so many films had been made here. 120 films or TV series appear in the film and that many or more didn’t make it in for various reasons. For me one of the more fun discoveries though was RUTA WAKENING, a crazy little film set around the original Ruta Maya coffeehouse on W. 4th St. in the mid-90s. I hung out at that place at the time and had no idea this film existed.

     

    WHAT ARE SOME OF THE AUSTIN-MADE FILMS THAT PEOPLE DON’T KNOW ABOUT?

    Cinephiles are aware of Eagle Pennell’s 70s films and Tobe Hooper’s first film EGGSHELLS, mainly because of the restorations that Louis Black has produced, but those aren’t really known to the general public. The Coen Brothers shot their first film BLOOD SIMPLE here in 1984 and more people than I thought don’t know about that. There was also a huge number of TV movies that shot here in the 80s and 90s that people are blissfully unaware of. That section of the movie definitely gets the most laughs. In the 90s you had Disney movies like BLANK CHECK and THE BIG GREEN, and for people who grew up with those movies they largely have no idea they were shot here, and are fairly wowed by that. So there are many, many films that most people don’t know about.

     

    WHAT IS THE MOST PROMINENT AUSTIN LOCATION SEEN IN LOCALLY-MADE FILMS?

    There’s a few locations that really stand out. The Paramount Theatre and the Driskill Hotel have been used many times in part because they were built over 100 years ago and can be used for period pieces and modern movies. Plus they’re just very cool, interesting buildings inside and out. The Broken Spoke has also been used probably a dozen times in various films and TV series. The place has such authentic character and the owner James White has wisely made it very available to productions. You also obviously get many exteriors of the State Capitol building and the interior and grounds have been used multiple times as well. One that’s lesser known is Arkie’s, which is now Sawyer & Co. That place has been used again and again in part because it’s one of the few diners in town.

     

    WERE THERE ANY TRENDS IN AUSTIN FILMMAKING THAT YOU NOTICED?

    The prominence of music in Austin movies probably stands out the most. There’s a lot of live music shown in Austin films, and there’s a large number of musicians acting in films and making films themselves. Story wise, many films involve someone coming to town, which makes sense because Austin is a place people have been moving to in droves for decades. EGGSHELLS, for instance, starts that way, so we start the film with that and then come full circle and end there as well.

     

    WHAT WAS YOUR PROCESS LIKE FOR RESEARCHING AND MAKING THE FILM?

    We identified films through IMDB, Alison Macor’s Austin film history book Chainsaws, Slackers, and Spy Kids, the local sections at Vulcan Video and I Luv Video, and friends who worked at the Austin Film Commission and Texas Film Commission. I was on the board of AFS through most of the production so staff and fellow board members were also extremely helpful just in their personal knowledge. Associate Producer Lara Morgan (at the time we started she was an apprentice at AFS) and I viewed and logged each film. We also had a great researcher Grahm Donovan who helped with that. That process obviously took a long time and was ongoing as new discoveries were made during production. Then Laura Colwell (also a former AFS apprentice) came on board as editor and another relatively long process began of how in the world do we craft all this into a compelling narrative. There were definitely times I though it might never work but I think we’re all pretty happy with how it turned out, and we’re especially glad that audiences really respond to the film.

     

    IN YOUR OPINION, WHAT MAKES AUSTIN AND ITS FILM COMMUNITY SO UNIQUE?

    Austin has always been somewhat of a “mecca” as Richard Linklater calls it, for people who are a little bit different. The culture to a degree tolerates and celebrates weirdness and that draws a lot of creative people here, especially from other parts of Texas. The film community I would also categorize as more cooperative than competitive. I think because we’re not LA or New York there’s more of a feeling that if an Austin filmmaker is successful that helps the entire community. The idea of a rising tide lifts all boats. You also have homegrown organizations and businesses like AFS, Alamo Drafthouse, Austin Film Festival, SXSW, and many others that add greatly to the city’s film culture and general knowledge appreciation of film. And of course the University of Texas.

     

    WHY DO YOU THINK AUSTIN HAS STAYED A DESTINATION FOR FILM PRODUCTION THROUGHOUT THE YEARS?

    Over the years a core group of experienced crew and actors became established here, so productions can come and they don’t need to bring all their people in. Having a number of small towns nearby where you can shoot is also a major factor. Plus there’s great music, food, and tons of stuff to do in this city. Obviously the current state of tax incentives has hurt us but we continue to get a decent number of films and TV shows coming here even despite that. If the lack of incentives becomes so dire that people pick up and move to other places though, we do risk losing some of the reason productions come here in the first place.

     

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF ARCHIVING THE HISTORY OF FILM IN AUSTIN?

    Well, as much as the film documents local film history, maybe more importantly it documents Austin itself through film. These films in various ways have created a record of the city over time. For instance sometimes movies are the only moving images of places that no longer exist. The legendary music venue Soap Creek Saloon that appears in OUTLAW BLUES and Eagle Pennell’s HELL OF A NOTE is a good example. To our knowledge no other footage of the interior exists, and certainly nothing of this quality. We’ve also created a large amount of highly organized data that can be used in a wide variety of ways. We provided some to the State Preservation Board just recently for a presentation they’re doing on the Capitol. There’s been talk of tours, an app. So who knows? We received tons of help creating this film so we’re certainly willing to share what we’ve learned in as many ways as possible.

     

    WHY WAS IT IMPORTANT FOR YOU TO MAKE THIS FILM?

    Well, I had this crazy idea (actually at an AFS screening) and started talking to people about it and it sort of grew from there. People liked it, they participated in it in various ways, and I just sort of kept it going. Austin is also my adopted hometown and I’ve been involved in a variety of community issues over the years so I know the city and its history reasonably well. So in some ways I was well-suited to do this, but in others it was really because I had the idea and needed to see it through.

  2. Four Films on the Fringe: Filmmaker Ron Mann Visits AFS Cinema this February

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    Get tickets for our Films of Ron Mann series.

    This week, we’ll have the first of many visits this month by filmmaker Ron Mann. Over the past 40 plus years, Canadian filmmaker Ron Mann has documented culture from the fringe inward, often focusing on outsider artists and others on the edge.

     

    Based in Toronto, Ron Mann is one of Canada’s foremost documentary filmmakers. He has established his international reputation as a chronicler of the counterculture and the visionary while with a series of award-winning theatrical documentaries, including IMAGINE THE SOUND (1981), POETRY IN MOTION (1982), COMIC BOOK CONFIDENTIAL (1988), TWIST (1992), GRASS (1999), TALES OF THE RAT FINK (2006), KNOW YOUR MUSHROOMS (2008), IN THE WAKE OF THE FLOOD (2010) and ALTMAN (2014). his newest film, CARMINE STREET GUITARS, about the legendary New York guitar shop, its staff and remarkable group of regular customers, screens this year at SXSW Film. Watch the trailer here.

    We’ll be screening four of our favorites by Mann this month with introductions (and, we hope, lots of amazing stories) from the man himself. Read on for more information.

    IMAGINE THE SOUND

    Ron Mann’s documentary shows us several masters of avant-garde jazz, both in conversation and performance – with Cecil Taylor, Paul Bley, Bill Dixon, and Archie Shepp. If you’re a bit unsure how to approach free jazz music, this will open up the philosophical space that these musical high priests operate in.

    COMIC BOOK CONFIDENTIAL

    In Ron Mann’s doc, the history of comic books and sequential art in twentieth century America is presented by a nonpareil cast of major creators including Will Eisner, Jack Kirby, Stan Lee, Lynda Barry, and R. Crumb.

    POETRY IN MOTION

    An invaluable document of some of North America’s greatest poets, circa 1982, captured by filmmaker Ron Mann, including Charles Bukowski, Amiri Baraka, Ntozake Shange, Gary Snyder, Tom Waits, and many others.

    GRASS

    Ron Mann’s often funny documentary shows us the many ways that cannabis prohibition in the United States has been intertwined with social attitudes about race, gender, and class.

     

  3. Here’s why everyone is freaking out about the “passionate… tempestuous” COLD WAR, opening Friday at AFS Cinema

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    COLD WAR opens at the AFS Cinema Friday, January 25. Tickets are on sale now.

    It’s rare that a subtitled, black-and-white, Eastern European art film like COLD WAR crosses over and becomes a must-see for even general audiences. But the film, written and directed by Polish filmmaker Pawel Pawlikowski (IDA) strikes so many universal chords in its story of star-crossed love, and is such a gorgeous example of cinematography – every frame truly is a work of art – that it achieves a kind of visual and emotional purity of expression that we see very rarely in today’s cinema.

    Additionally, there is the human element. The leads Joanna Kulig and Tomasz Kot, give exceptional performances in their roles, based on the director’s own parents, as a passionate couple ripped apart by powerful political factions. Not only are they skilled performers, they are beautiful camera subjects. This is not a trivial matter in a movie that is effectively a construction of idealized images. Cinematographer Lukasz Zal places the two in a Cartier-Bresson-like visual reality that accentuates their old-school movie-star planes and angles. It really works. The film is an emotional symphony of images.

    The film received three Oscar nominations today, for Best Foreign Film (Pawlikowski’s previous film IDA won this category in 2015), Best Director, and Best Cinematography.

    Here’s what the critics are saying about COLD WAR:

    “A near-perfect film, an artfully crafted, flawlessly acted meditation on love, memory and invented history that’s both deeply personal and politically attuned.” – Ann Hornaday, Washington Post

    “Glorious. Made with a verve and lyricism which rekindles memories of the glory days of European New Wave cinema. Invokes memories of Milos Forman, Jiri Menzel, and Francois Truffaut at the start of their careers.”
    – George McNab, The Independent (UK)

    “Wholly riveting to watch, Joanna Kulig rifles through moods and attitudes with the casual magnetism of a young Jeanne Moreau, or even a Euro Jennifer Lawrence. The lovingly handpicked soundtrack, ranging from darkly mesmerizing folks curiosities to torchy blues standards to a climatic, ethereal wave of Glenn Gould-interpreted Bach. A film crafted with almost eerie exactitude across the board… (with) finely wrought black-and-white compositions, each frame an exquisite tile of milk-and-malt melancholy.”
    – Guy Lodge, Variety

  4. Costume Experts Discuss Edith Head’s Work in THE LADY EVE

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    Edith Head’s Hollywood continues through January 31. Don’t miss next week’s screening, ROMAN HOLIDAY. Get tickets.

    We’re fortunate in Austin to not only have a major university with hundreds of scholars, but also a great museum and archive, the Harry Ransom Center. For our ongoing Edith Head series, we’ll be joined each Thursday by professionals from The University of Texas and the HRC. Below we have a fun, insightful discussion with Susan Mickey (University of Texas Costume Designer) and Jill Morena (Harry Ransom Center Costume Specialist) on Edith Head’s costumes for THE LADY EVE. Enjoy.

    P.S. For some bonus content, Jill Morena wrote an article for The Austin Chronicle on Edith Head. Read it here.

  5. He Doesn’t Want Any Trouble: Why Jackie Chan is the Master of Action Comedy

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    Anyone who has seen a Jackie Chan film (and if you haven’t, stop reading this and get tickets to DRUNKEN MASTER at AFS Jan. 11 – 14 ) has experienced his gift for splitting sides while he’s splitting skulls. And while his choreography and physical humor looks effortless, they’re actually the result of painstaking planning and sometimes hundreds of takes. Like the great physical comedians Keaton, Chaplin and Lloyd, Chan is a perfectionist who bends the laws of physics for a laugh, all while dodging feet, fists, and the occasional forklift. Take 10 minutes to watch the excellent video essay series Every Frame A Painting break down just what makes Jackie Chan unparalleled among action auteurs.

  6. Remembering Filmmaker Al Reinert (FOR ALL MANKIND)

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    We were heartbroken this week to learn that one of our much-loved shining stars of the Texas film community, Al Reinert, passed away over the holiday. While Al was perhaps best known for his Academy Award-nominated screenplay, APOLLO 13, he was a passionate non-fiction storyteller who worked closely with our artist services team here at AFS on several recent documentaries, including  AN UNREAL DREAM (2013), about the false imprisonment of Texan Michael Morton, and the John James Audubon film, AUDUBON (2016).

    Al’s 1989 immersive, poetic documentary about the Apollo missions, FOR ALL MANKIND (nominated for an Academy Award), is as unforgettable as the man himself. We had the great pleasure of hosting what we expected to be a semi-regular retrospective screening of the film several years ago, not realizing at the time it would be the last time we’d have Al in attendance. You can watch the fascinating Q&A here, with Al and a truly incredible group of retired Apollo mission ground controllers. This will remain one of our most special memories of our work with Al.

    Science on Screen: FOR ALL MANKIND

    We will miss our friend, who was endlessly warm, kind-hearted and curious. Despite the fact that he could have been a Hollywood insider, he felt more at home in the hills of Wimberley than southern California. He followed his own passions in filmmaking, which led him to make beautiful and unusual films on subjects that fascinated him. In short, he was the consummate Texas filmmaker—big-hearted and creatively adventurous. You can read more about Al, his life and work, in this obituary from the Houston Chronicle.

    Contributed by Holly Herrick

  7. Celebrating Hollywood’s Greatest Costume Designer: New Edith Head Series Begins Tonight

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    Edith Head’s Hollywood begins January 3rd with THE LADY EVE and continues through January 31st. See the full line-up and showtimes here.

    You learn a lot of names in film school: Godard, Garbo, Griffith. But, regardless of the talent of these towering figures, the one name associated with nearly every iconic film of the twentieth century is one you rarely come across but that changed the history of cinema forever: Edith Head. Even with the foresight that her career spanned over 400 films, when you truly break it down, it is staggering the impact Edith made on Hollywood and the individuals who at one point in their career were fitted, seen, and admired in an Edith Head original. Ruling the Costume Design departments at Paramount and Universal Studios for nearly 6 decades and garnering 35 Oscar nominations and winning 8 — the most of any woman in history — Edith Head is not only the most influential costume designer of the twentieth century but one of the most influential artists as well. Fashion would simply not be what it is today were it not for Edith and her tirelessly inventive and sophisticated palette.

    Barbara Stanwyck wearing an Edith Head original in THE LADY EVE

    Our Edith Head’s Hollywood series begins (tonight, January 3rd) with THE LADY EVE, starring Barbara Stanwyck. Preston Sturges’ deliriously inventive 1941 screwball comedy allows Stanwyck the perfect opportunity to show off her virtuosic talents by playing two wildly different characters: con artist Jean Harrington and aristocrat Lady Eve Sidwich. Regardless of Stanwyck’s talents, pulling off a double performance in 1941 was a difficult task and, at that time, there was only one person capable of providing the necessary materials: Edith Head. Stanwyck elegantly drifts from Jean to Eve while draped in Edith’s marvelous costumes and spouting out the kind of lines only Sturges knew how to write. Stanwyck insisted to producer Samuel Goldwyn that Edith Head be commissioned to create her costumes and, years later, would continue to request that Edith be loaned out to work for Warner Bros. Though these later collaborations produced interesting and certainly worthwhile designs, their initial work on THE LADY EVE remains the benchmark for what can be done when comedy, charisma, and craftsmanship are blended to such perfection that anything seems possible.

    “From then on I had Edith Head’s name written into every contract, no matter what studio I was working for.”Barbara Stanwyck

    Edith Head on The Lady Eve:

    “THE LADY EVE changed both our lives. It was Barbara’s first high fashion picture and her biggest transition in costuming. She was already a top star and had an image long before I got to her. She was always playing plain Janes, women to whom clothes meant nothing. Yet Barbara was quite trim and had a better shape than most of the other actresses around. She possessed what some designers considered to be a figure “problem” – a long waist and a comparatively low rear end. By widening the waistbands on the front in her gowns and narrowing them slightly in the back, I could still put her in straight skirts, something other designers were afraid to do, because they thought she might look too heavy in the seat. Since she wasn’t the least bit heavy, I just took advantage of her long waist to create an optical illusion.”

    “For her gambler character I had used sharp contrasts – black on white, all black, all white, to make her appear a tad coarse. Naturally I chose much richer, more luxurious fabrics (later in the film). I left the sequins and the glitter to the lady gambler in the beginning.”

    “I had used Spanish motifs on much of THE LADY EVE wardrobe… Barbara looked sensational in poncho and serape styles and she was so sexy in the clothes that suddenly Latin American fashions swept the country.”

    Edith Head’s Hollywood runs January 3-31 at AFS Cinema. Get tickets today.
    • Contributed by Davis Rivera
  8. 11 Photos of Golden Age Hollywood Stars Celebrating the Holidays

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    Make your own holiday memories this year at our Home for the Holidays film series, beginning December 22nd. Get tickets.

    It’s finally the holiday season again and to celebrate, we wanted to share with you some candid moments from days long past. It’s comforting to remember that even the biggest stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age occasionally took off the makeup, drank some egg nog, built a snowman, and went skating on the local frozen-over lake. Here are 11 festive photos of Hollywood icons:

    Swashbuckler Errol Flynn building a cowboy snowman.
    Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall decorating a tree with their son, Stephen.
    (Catch the dynamite couple in THE BIG SLEEP, screening in December at AFS) 
    Grace Kelly skiing with her son Albert.
    Rita Hayworth putting the finishing touches on a tree.
    Boris Karloff and Ginger Rogers at a Christmas party.
    Louise Brooks poses next to her desktop winter tree. 
    Sophia Loren gets lost in the tinsel.
    Hedy Lamarr with her children. 
    Greta Garbo stuns even with a Santa hat on.
    Anna May Wong opens gifts under a Christmas tree in Hollywood.
    Audrey Hepburn meets Santa Clause.

    Make your own holiday memories this year at our Home for the Holidays film series, beginning December 22nd. Get tickets.

  9. Noir Canon Series Begins Friday with Greatest Hits of the Genre

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    Back by popular demand, we’re showing several of the key films of the film noir genre starting November 23rd. While the genre can be defined by many themes, we examined the films in our upcoming series and have examples of what really makes the film noir. See our video below to see a few examples of what makes a film noir what it is. After watching that, get your tickets to join us for all four of the films included in this series. Get your tickets here.


    TOUCH OF EVIL

    November 23rd & 25th

    After a decade of exile to Europe following CITIZEN KANE, Orson Welles returned to Hollywood. He was initially signed on just to act in the film that became TOUCH OF EVIL, but at the behest of Charlton Heston, Universal let Welles direct as well.  The result wasn’t just a high water mark for the noir genre, but a film that pushed the medium forward with touches like an all-in three-minute long-take tracking shot right at its opening.  Welles took the pulpy source material–a border-town crime thriller–and transformed it with his Shakespearian grandeur and technical virtuosity.

    After CITIZEN KANE, Hollywood executives never made the same “mistake” of granting Welles final cut again–and his version of the film was cut down for its theatrical release.  Luckily, AFS has been sent Universal’s “Reconstructed Version” of the film, which adheres to Welles’ original vision.  On 35mm.

    NIGHT AND THE CITY

    November 30th & December 2nd

    The opening moments of NIGHT AND THE CITY display a man out of breath, and the pace of the film never lets that feeling go. All the weight of the oppressive noir universe is placed on our small-time con-man protagonist (Richard Widmark) until it finally crushes him. The entire film hinges on Widmark’s performance, which is a tiptoed dance from exasperation to smarmy subterfuge, and back again. Call it a fall from something (grace is too generous).

    The film would be the last produced in the United States by the film’s director, Jules Dassin. He had made several notable noirs in the states, including BRUTE FORCE and THE NAKED CITY, but was a victim of Hollywood blacklisting during the red scare. After NIGHT AND THE CITY he relocated to Europe.

    NIGHTMARE ALLEY

    December 7th & 9th

    In its heyday, the carnival was seen as one of the lowest forms of entertainment, making it a perfect setting for a noir film and its inhabitants. In NIGHTMARE ALLEY, we follow the rise and fall of “The Great Stanton,” a performer surrounded by characteristically icy women as accomplices.  The film was a 20th Century Fox production, directed by frequent-Bette-Davis-collaborator Edmund Goulding. 20th Century Fox poured money into the gorgeously grotesque production (an uncommon occurrence for a noir film), hired over 100 real carnies and even built a real working carnival on a backlot. Star Tyrone Power recalled NIGHTMARE ALLEY as his personal favorite performance of his. On 35mm.

    THE BIG SLEEP

    December 14th & 17th

    An important facet of the noir is confusion. Many noir films’ plots are intentionally disorienting to both the protagonist and the audience.  Howard Hawks’s THE BIG SLEEP is no exception, and often what sticks with us isn’t the plot (which stays hazy), but instead the characters, the snark, the chemistry–especially in the case of a film starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall.  Based on a novel by Raymond Chandler, THE BIG SLEEP stuck narrative gold by placing its setting in Los Angeles, which takes on a mythic character all its own with endless dark bungalows and decaying nightspots.

    • Contributed by Henry Graham
  10. Hitting the Road? Enjoy our podcast recommendations from AFS staff

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    ‘Tis the season to pack up and hit the road for the holidays. There’s no better time than now to start listening to new podcasts to keep you entertained along the way. We asked the staff here at AFS for podcast recommendations to hold you over for the next six weeks. Shameless plug: you can always listen to the AFS Viewfinders podcast here and anywhere else you can stream podcasts (iTunes, Spotify, etc).

    P.S. On December 6, we’ll be joined by Karina Longworth, one of the top podcasters around. Longworth’s You Must Remember This podcast delves into stories of classic Hollywood and its idols, including Jane Fonda, Joan Crawford, Jean Seberg, and many, many more. Longworth will host a rare 35mm screening of WAIT TILL THE SUN SHINES, NELLIE, then sit down for a conversation with Richard Linklater. This is a can’t miss event. Get your tickets here.

    Without further adieu…

    Lars Nilsen, Lead Film Programmer

    You Must Remember This is in the top rank of movie podcasts, and Karina Longworth is bringing the literature and lore of Hollywood to the masses in new ways, and making new connections with audiences. Classic Hollywood’s behind-the-scenes dramas are often as compelling as the onscreen ones, and Karina brings that to life.

    Gilbert Gottfried’s Amazing Colossal Podcast can be maddeningly juvenile, but the guests are a pretty amazing cross-section of the film and TV nostalgia circuit. Expect to hear a lot of well-rehearsed stories/lies from people who have spent a lot of time on the convention floor signing autographs, but in-between enjoy the hourlong conversations with some fairly fascinating people who are scarcely interviewed elsewhere – people like Rosanna Arquette, Keith Carradine, Richard Donner and others.

    The Best Show with Tom Scharpling is the podcast outgrowth of Scharpling’s earlier WFMU show of the same name. Scharpling, a comedy writer and director, is very quick and funny, and his shows are a master-class in how to do comedy without a trace of hackishness. There are call-ins, special guests from all disciplines, and regular “character” call-ins from the mind of Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster. It’s a long (3-4) hour hang-out type show, and, for me anyway, has become an unmissable weekly routine.

    The Carson Podcast is totally not for everyone. Every week a different guest is interviewed about Johnny Carson’s “Tonight Show” run. One week it will be Angie Dickinson, another week it will be Carson’s cue-card man, the next week it is Ed McMahon’s daughter. I don’t even especially care all that much about Carson or the show but the stories are super-interesting. From listening to this podcast for a year and a half, I feel that a virtual hologram of the show’s 30 year history has been etched into my brain, and I like it.

    Cole Roulain and Ericca Long, hosts of The Magic Lantern Podcast, are sort of the Nick and Nora Charles of movie podcasting. They are a married couple whose enthusiasm and respect for each others’ opinions and feelings is the animating spirit of the show. There are no facile opinions here, no parroting of publicity angles; these two engage with films both old and new with open minds and open hearts. It’s a joy to hear this much sincerity and intelligent consideration of films. After listening to two or three of these, Cole and Ericca begin to feel like treasured, trusted old friends whose advice and opinions we look forward to immensely.

    Christine Lee, Director of Marketing and Communications

    I recommend Homecoming, a narrative podcast with A-list talent including Catherine Keener and David Schwimmer. The story lures you in and keeps you guessing throughout — it makes for compelling and fun listening. It reminded me of my Serial (season one!) addiction. An Amazon Original TV adaptation just launched, with Julia Roberts as the lead. Can’t wait to see how it compares to the podcast!

    Shannon Kors, Sales Manager

    The DGA Director’s Cut is an intimate conversation usually between a filmmaker (writer/director/actor, etc) and a currently released film director. It’s a great conversation with some behind-the-scenes of the creative process with an audience Q&A section as well. Very similar to a Rick-moderated conversation with another filmmaker.

    Max Benitez, Production Services Specialist

    Like many cultural phenomena, what was once niche programming is now an NPR podcast. Stretch and Bobbito had global reach before the internet and their 90’s radio show discovered artists like Jay Z and Wu-Tang Clan. Kids in my Chicago high school would pass around bootleg tapes of their show recorded off the New York City airwaves. Now Stretch and Bob’s interviews range from filmmaker Jonah Hill to singer Erykah Badu to graphic novelist Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez.

    I also listen to Fresh Air (WHYY) and The Business (KCRW) faithfully, too. But it’s also nice to hear boisterousness that sounds like hanging out with old friends.

    Michael Thielvoldt, Program Manager

    I love Karina Longworth’s show You Must Remember This. Additionally, though, I listen to Film Spotting, Slate’s Spoiler Special, and the film relevant episodes of Studio 360 and The Turnaround. For anyone with the ambition to hunt down a retired podcast there used to be a great series titled Watching the Directors, created and hosted by Joe and Melissa Johnson, that looked at a different director and her/his auteur signature per episode. This is definitely worth listening to if you can find it.

    Chris Engberg, Manager, Austin Studios

    I Was There Too with Matt Gourley is great. Interviews with people involved in some way or another in giant films, classics, etc. Matt Gourley also hosts podcasts with Paul F. Tompkins, Andy Daly, and other big comedy types — all great but not as film centric as this.

    Austin Culp, Marketing Strategist

    I’ve been making it a weekly habit to listen to Unspooled, hosted by Amy Nicholson (of the Canon) and Paul Scheer (from “The League” and many other projects). They’re doing a week-by-week review of the AFI Top 100 list from 2007, going behind-the-scenes of film and interviewing fans, friends, and those tangentially related to the film (the current owner of the boat from THE AFRICAN QUEEN).

  11. Beyond the Street: Garry Winogrand Photographs Austin in the 1970s

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    GARRY WINOGRAND: ALL THINGS ARE PHOTOGRAPHABLE opens Friday, October 26 at AFS Cinema. Buy tickets.

    Garry Winogrand rejected the term “street photography.” He would explain in a thick Bronx accent, “I don’t think it tells you anything about a photographer or work, in a way . . . call me instead a zoo photographer, it doesn’t make any sense to me.” While a lot of Winogrand’s pictures were taken in the metropolitan depths of New York or Los Angeles, he sought to break away from narrow distinctions like “street photography” or “documentary photography” or “photojournalism.” His work, along with the work of his contemporaries, marked a shift from mere documentary into the world of fine art—but in his own words, he aimed to “transform the real world into something completely different: into a distinct image.”

    To that end, he didn’t confine his photography to the literal street. Beyond the shots of businessmen, shopkeepers, and other bodies in motion surrounded by concrete and brick were forays into the outskirts. One such outskirt was Austin, where Winogrand spent a brief period teaching photography at the University of Texas (1973-78). The incredibly prolific photographer began shooting as soon as he landed, taking pictures of people waiting for their flights in the Austin airport.

    Winogrand’s visit yielded a handful of pictures that succinctly captured the spirit of the city. Past the airport, the photographer goes out into football country, documenting a Longhorns game.

    Farther still, Winogrand captures a moment at Hippie Hollow—a more naturalistic setting than downtown New York.

    Sasha Waters Freyer, director of the new Winogrand documentary GARRY WINOGRAND: ALL THINGS ARE PHOTOGRAPHABLE, attests that the photographer understood the voyeuristic nature of all street photography, and through his framing of information, characters, and tension “he sort of advance[d] the medium by taking this tool of journalism and doing something totally different with it.” It’s safe to say Winogrand is not done surprising us yet, as he left behind thousands and thousands of undeveloped film rolls—all waiting to give us another glimpse into his world.

    GARRY WINOGRAND: ALL THINGS ARE PHOTOGRAPHABLE opens October 26th at AFS Cinema. Get your tickets here

    • Contributed by Harold Urteaga
  12. Giallo, Ghosts, and Gore: Horror Films at AFS Cinema this October

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    October is here and the Halloween season is upon us. As you’re scheduling your own 31 Nights of Halloween, look no further than the AFS Cinema calendar to layer in rare theatrical screenings and more. This month, we’re presenting a variety of horror films, from a giallo series to a Japanese vampire trilogy to John Carpenter’s classic THE THING.

    GIALLO: FIVE NOTES IN BLACK

    October 5 – 28

    The Italian style of thriller that has become known as the giallo, is, when done well, fascinating and haunting, thanks in large part to the films’ scores. This series presents some of the best films of the genre, and some of the best soundtracks.

     

    THE BLOODTHIRSTY TRILOGY

    October 6 – 20

    Inspired by the runaway success of the British and American gothic horror films of the sixties, Toho studios brought the vampiric tropes of the Dracula legend to Japanese screens with The Vampire Doll, Lake of Dracula, and Evil of Dracula – three spookily effective cult classics collectively known as The Bloodthirsty Trilogy.

    ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN

    October 14

    It’s not only Frankenstein’s monster (Glenn Strange) –Dracula (Bela Lugosi) and the Wolf Man (Lon Chaney Jr.) are invited to the party, too! By 1948 the character-driven horror films at Universal had petered out – along with the careers of Abbott and Costello. The genius idea to combine the comedy duo (playing for laughs) and the monsters (playing it straight) was a hit. Although it was a swan song for the monsters it was the first in a series of four comedic horror films for Abbott & Costello. Come celebrate Halloween with AFS while we laugh at the monsters and Abbott & Costello’s antics – no nightmares here!

    LATES: THE ADDICTION

    October 19 – 20

    A PhD candidate in philosophy explores being and nothingness as a vampire and craven junkie for that most precious sanguine fluid – blood. From writer Nicholas St. John (KING OF NEW YORK, DRILLER KILLER) comes a deliriously heady blend of Descartes and Catholic despair set to the colorful hip-hop conceits of Cypress Hill’s “I Wanna Get High”. An utterly original nocturnal trek through the metaphysical starring: Lily Taylor, Christopher Walken, Annabella Sciorra and a third of the eventual Sopranos cast. THE ADDICTION is a bite in the night – Abel Ferrara’s New York –shot in stark black and white.

    EVERGREENS: HAUSU

    Opens October 23 – Additional showtimes to be added soon

    How to describe Nobuhiko Obayashi’s 1977 movie House? As a psychedelic ghost tale? A stream-of-consciousness bedtime story? An episode of Scooby Doo as directed by Dario Argento? Any of the above will do for this hallucinatory head trip about a schoolgirl who travels with six classmates to her ailing aunt’s creaky country home, only to come face to face with evil spirits, bloodthirsty pianos, and a demonic housecat. Too absurd to be genuinely terrifying, yet too nightmarish to be merely comic, House seems like it was beamed to Earth from another planet. Or perhaps the mind of a child: the director fashioned the script after the eccentric musings of his eleven-year-old daughter, then employed all the tricks in his analog arsenal (mattes, animation, and collage) to make them a visually astonishing, raucous reality. Never before released in the United States, and a bona fide cult classic in the making, House is one of the most exciting genre discoveries in years. Janus Films

    HUMA BHABHA PRESENTS: THE THING

    October 24 – 29

    In what may be the most expressive use of practical special effects technology in a horror film, John Carpenter, and effects guru Rob Bottin have created an unforgettably visceral and effective scare machine of a film about a shape-changing alien invader whose first casualties on Earth are the inhabitants of a polar research station.

    EYESLICER HALLOWEEN TOUR

    October 23

    Taking viewers on a chaotic journey through the liminal space of the Halloween season, The Eyeslicer Halloween Special feels like an acid trip down the Halloween aisle at Party City. The Special features work by over a dozen boundary-pushing American filmmakers (and includes shorts that have played at places like Sundance, SXSW, TIFF, and True/False). The Special is created by Dan Schoenbrun and Vanessa McDonnell (collective:unconscious, Chained for Life), executive produced by the radical artist collective Meow Wolf, and hosted by nine amateur Elvira impersonators we found on Craigs List.

    HABICAT FOR HUMANITY: SLEEPWALKERS

    October 26

    Stephen King’s tale about a mother-son duo hiding an unusual secret. When they move to a small town in search of new prey, a high-school girl has to fight for her life in this gory (and at times humorous) horror film.

    HALLOWEEN: THE CHANGELING

    October 31

    The fully-restored 1980 gem that made Martin Scorsese’s 11 Scariest Horror Movies Of All Time list. This movie represents a career peak for both star George C. Scott and director Peter Medak (THE RULING CLASS.) Oscar-winner Scott delivers major feels as a classical music composer consumed by grief after his wife and daughter are killed in a shocking accident. When he moves to a secluded Victorian mansion, he finds himself haunted by a paranormal entity that unleashes an even more disturbing secret. Based on actual events! (AGFA)

    HALLOWEEN: SISTERS

    October 31

    Margot Kidder is Danielle, a beautiful model separated from her Siamese twin, Dominique. When a hotshot reporter (Jennifer Salt) suspects Dominique of a brutal murder, she becomes dangerously ensnared in the sisters’ insidious sibling bond. A scary and stylish paean to female destructiveness, De Palma’s first foray into horror voyeurism is a stunning amalgam of split-screen effects, bloody birthday cakes, and a chilling score by frequent Hitchcock collaborator Bernard Herrmann.-Janus

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