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in Film:

Brooklyn Film Festival Review: “Eadweard”

June 5, 2015 By WG News + Arts Leave a Comment

“Eadweard” directed by Kyle Rideout
Reviewed by Main Tim
Eadward Muybridge

Near the middle of the feature-length biopic Eadweard, the main character, the spry, late middle-aged 19th century photographer Eadweard Muybridge, as portrayed by actor Michael Eklund, lifts a pocket watch that allegedly keeps poor time, from San Francisco drama critic Harry Larkyns, a man he suspects is having an affair with his wife. It’s the wee hours and the faulty timepiece is blamed for keeping the young wife out way past his bedtime.  Muybridge takes possession of the watch in question, just as he believes possession has been taken of his wife. He says to his uncomfortable rival, “A watch can be repaired.” Not just an object lesson, but cold, prophetic words from the man who controlled time by freezing and unfreezing it in his ground-breaking scientific photography of human and animal locomotion.

After being shot at point blank range by Muybridge and quickly dying a reel later, it’s safe to say that Muybridge and his rival Larkyn both understand a heart, whether stopped by a bullet or crushed by betrayal, can rarely be repaired.

The film "Eadweard" by Kyle Rideout

To dramatic effect, the Muybridge character removes Victorian clothing (and repression) from his subjects by declaring, “From now on, all of my subjects will be naked.” It’s a turning point in his study relevant. Just scientific research he earnestly tries to explain to his wife. Completely different than her modeling with a bare a shoulder for a painter. She just doesn’t get it.

An introductory portrayal is of a much younger Muybridge suffering a severe head injury in a stagecoach accident. It’s accepted that this accounts for his work’s inventive inquiry and raging domestic jealousy. On trial for the murder years later, he was found not guilty. Not because of brain-damaged insanity as his defense argued, but via justifiable homicide, or “By doin’ the right thing,” as the jury foreman in the film declares. It was  the last time in the U.S. justice was served out in that ancient, primitive manner. But it’s not what ended with Muybridge, it’s what began with him.

Based on a recent stage play of the same name. Canadian director Kyle Rideout’s Eadweard faithfully follows the biographic template of Muybridge as covered previously by Phillip Glass’s opera The Photographer. Minus Mr. Glass’s meditative repetition, and likewise in contrast to Muybridge’s concern that his work was perceived as art and not scientific discovery, Mr. Rideout is comfortable finding a story of love and passion with the trappings of quirky, scientific inquiry.

Click here for full schedule and information about the Brooklyn Film Festival.

Controversy Follows Him, Filmmaker and Gambling Man—Gonzalo García-Pelayo

July 31, 2014 By WG News + Arts Leave a Comment

By Mariola Rey, in collaboration with Elena Piñango.

Still from "Corridas de Alegría" (1982)

Still from “Corridas de Alegría” (1982)

There are some artists who never bridge the Atlantic divide, or do so later in their careers, if not posthumously. Friend, and former Williamsburg dancer, Mariola Rey, introduces a Spaniard who may be on his way to doing so in the twilight of his career. Meet Gonzalo García-Pelayo, a music producer, a movie producer, a man who has been both celebrated and reviled in his own country for his irreverence and dark themes. —Editor

Gonzalo Garcia-Pelayo, now in his late sixties, is especially recognized in Europe for penning and directing Alegrías de Cádiz (2013), Vivir en Sevilla (1978), and Manuela (1976). Among the hundreds of records he produced, he is widely known for producing a flamenco-blues band called Triana in 1970s Spain.

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The Films of Anton Perich: Shit on the Fenders of Your Convertible Because We’re Coming Through No Matter What

June 24, 2014 By WG News + Arts Leave a Comment

In 1973, filmmaker Anton Perich, the legendary Candy Darling and Taylor Mead, and the Broadway actor Craig Vandenburgh went to a nice apartment on Central Park West to make a film. The apartment belonged to the art collector Sam Green and the walls were groaning with Warhols. Perich came up with a simple scenario: Taylor Mead would play a decadent and perverse wall street type, Candy his socialite daughter. As the film opens, Craig Vanderbilt plays the piano for Candy while she screams “Play!” and strikes the instrument with her high heeled shoe. From there, everything is improvised. Before the night is through, Candy and Craig have split, Taylor Mead sits on the stairs, singing incoherently, with his pants around his ankles, and Anton Perich had a finished film.



Many of Perich’s films were made this way, in two or three takes and improvised from simple premises. His films and interviews feature many regulars from Max’s Kansas City (he was a busboy there) and Warhol’s clan (he was also a photographer for INTERVIEW), including Andrea Feldman, Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis, Edwige Belmore and Tinkerbelle, as well as orbiting artists and celebrities like John Cage and Merce Cunningham, Hugh Hefner, Grace Jones and John Waters, resulting in an incredible cross-pollination between art and personality.

FRANKENSTINO (1973, starring Taylor Mead as Frankenstein, Katrina Toland, Jayne County and Robert Starr) was shot in the studio of sculptor John Chamberlain atop one of his giant works of foam (and features the line which serves as title for this series, uttered by Taylor Mead). In VICTOR HUGO ROJAS, the performance artist descends into an “Egyptian trance” (he’s wrapped in toilet water, spritzed with water and doused with baby powder) before destroying an original Warhol painting. In HUNTINGTON HARTFORD’S TIE e still uses improvisation to build on simple narratives – lately they often have to do with technology (he equates googling oneself to masturbating).

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Greenpoint Film Festival 2014 Call for Submissions

June 7, 2014 By WG News + Arts Leave a Comment

greenpoint film festival

2014 FESTIVAL COMING SEPTEMBER 18-21

Late and Extended Submission Deadlines are June 15 and July 6. Submission form here.

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Russian Mowgli Screening at The Picture Show in Greenpoint

April 11, 2014 By WG News + Arts Leave a Comment

mowgli invite cardThe Picture Show presents Mowgli. In 1967, two adaptations of Rudyard Kipling’s work, The Jungle Book, were realized. One was produced by Walt Disney and the other, released in episodical form, by the state-owned animation studio of the USSR, Soyuzmultfilm. This Mowgli is the version you didn’t see growing up.

Director: Roman Davydov
USSR / 1961-71 / Total run time 96 min (5 episodes total)
$5 at 7:30 p.m.

The Picture Show—a new experimental microcinema in Greenpoint.
226 Green St.
Brooklyn, NY 11222

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