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Sunday, November 1, 2009
LITTLE ROCK — Wine is not something that can be understood in the manner of Bernoulli’s principle or even Schrodinger’s cat experiment. There is little about it that can be proved and nothing about it to refute the authority of individual taste.
Wine is like music in that we like what we like. And while learning and exposure can lead us to appreciate that which we otherwise might not have, all of us have at our core a set of possibly immutable preferences that resist intellectual exercise.
Given this, you might think that people would simply be able to relax and drink what they like - and in the real world, this is what people seem to do. People happily consume white zinfandel and light beer, they eat chicken nuggets and watch American Idol, and they don’t much care that there are snobs who think these things declasse.
But people who drink wine seem especially attuned to brand names and the opinions of critics, so much sothat a wine writer like Robert Parker can amass enormous power simply by publishing his opinions. Parker seems to like wines with big fruit, high alcoholic content and low acidity, and he’s critical of “industrial” wines with little flavor and character.
In turn, Parker’s critics charge him with receiving what they consider fundamental flaws in wines - especially excessive oak and alcohol - as distinctions. Worse, they allege Parker is so powerful that winemakers - who stand to gain or lose millions of dollars or euros based on his reviews - purposefully make wines suited to his taste. The resultant “Parkerization” of wine has resulted in what some see as a homogenization of fine wines, with big, jammy reds with a kick as the dominant style.
Jonathan Nossiter is not a Parker fan.
Nossiter is a film director (with a film in production right now, Rio Sex Comedy, starring Matt Dillon and Charlotte Rampling) who has become one of the world’s leading exponents of a tricky idea called “terroir.”
Some people don’t believe in “terroir” and dismiss it as a primarily French marketing technique. The word itself refers to a confluence of factors, including but not limited to type of grapes, age of vines, climate, soil, elevation and sunlight, that go into producing a genuine first-class wine.
Nossiter is a true believer in terroir - his 2004 documentary Mondovino, whichwas nominated for the Palme d’Or at Cannes, was basically a brief for terroir, which Nossiter argued was being threatened by greedy globalists softening tannins by means of microoxygenation.
(While terroir is a mysterious concept, almost everyone who has a serious relationship with wine seems to believe in it to some extent. Even Parker, who seems dismissive of the idea when interviewed in Mondovino, pays it some credit. “No great wine can come from a terroir that’s not very good,” he told PBS chat presenter Charlie Rose a few years ago. “This is why you don’t have vineyards growing in the Sahara, and why you don’t have great wines being made in Arkansas. There’s no really good terroir.”)
Nossiter went on to expand Mondovino into a 10-hour TV series (which will be released on DVD later this month, suggested retail price $59.95).Now he has published Liquid Memory, a sort of memoir of wine that carries forth his case against the dark forces.
Part personal history (Nossiter began consuming wine “by the finger drop” at the age of 2), part subversive circuit of the most pretentious Paris wine shops and restaurants, and part heartfelt (and sometimes irritatingly self-aggrandizing) ode to the living creature that is wine, Liquid Memory is, well, quite a book.
Nossiter prefers leaner, more acidic and eccentric wines. He hates that Parker and his (slavish) followers have effectively dumbed down the market. Nossiter dislikes Parker’s proclivity for the big fruity boomers, but he really hates his famous 50-to-100 grading scale.
“To assign numbers to a wine, given that a wine is fully living and infinitely mutable,” Nossiter writes, “is almost as repugnant to me as assigning numerical worth to humans.”
Now, some readers may remember that - in my movie critic guise, I ripped off Parker’s grading scale for this newspaper’s film reviews. And you might also remember that I regularly complain about the inadequacy of the grades, and the absurdity of taking them too seriously.
As Parker himself has noted, often the grade itself is more an indication of the emotional experience than the actual quality of the product - what I might assign an 88 one day could be a 90 the next. We use such ratings for the same reasons we suspect Parker does - because people generally expect a verdict.
Yet while Nossiter’s criticisms of Parker strike me as valid, his apparent pathological distaste for the man strikes me as frightening and hilarious. Nossiter doesn’t like anything about Parker, he detests his writing style and his house. He probably hates the man’s dog.
Some of this may be understandable, given the vitriol that was heaped upon Nossiter after the release of Mondovino. (Parker didn’t like the way he was portrayed in the film and neither did a lot of Parker’s fans.) But it’s a little unnerving. I mean, I hope Nossiter doesn’t see this piece, or if he does, that he likes it.
Anyway, did I mention how much I liked his 2000 film Signs and Wonders?
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Style, Pages 55 on 11/01/2009
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
LITTLE ROCK — When Michael Jackson died June 25, a lot of people thought there was an overabundance of media attention given the event and the singer’s subsequent funeral.
They were probably right, for as noteworthy an event as death is to the individual, it is something that comes to kings and paupers. When we grieve for a pop star we’ve never met, the truth is we’re indulging an unseemly habit of self-regard. We’re really mourning ourselves and our mortality, or taking opportunistic advantage of the occasion to declare ourselves sensitive. Jackson was a thing to me, an image I saw moving on TV, a noise I heard on the radio.
Granted I had grown up with this image. I had been acquainted with Jackson’s sound and vision since both of us were 10 years old.(Does it mean anything that the three great transitional pop music figures of the 1980s - Jackson, Prince and Madonna - were all born within a few months of each other in the upper Midwest in 1958?)
And my generation’s relationship with television and pop music was such that we probably felt a greater intimacy with our rock’n’ roll heroes than prior generations - we had their lunchboxes, we watched their cartoon versions - but I had nothing like a personal relationship with Jackson.
I simply consumed his music and the proffered gossip, legends and hype. I grew up a little and considered his music a little more seriously than perhaps people should. Over the past 30 years or so, I’ve probably written as much about Jackson as I have about any performer save Elvis Presley. I’ve thought about Jackson professionally, which, when I think about it, is an odd thing to have done.
LOVING THE ALIEN
As early as 1984, it was difficult to write about Jackson without introducing a note of melancholy- without wondering if we all didn’t bear some collective responsibility for his overweening strangeness. Jackson has been famous for most of his life; celebrity descended upon him when he was a child and took him in its talons. He had no chance - he was singing ballads to rats, he’d been molded into a Saturday morning cartoon, before he was out of middle school.
A friend of mine had a chance encounter with Jackson - and his bodyguards - in a New York record store that year. Jackson was already wearing his ridiculously ineffective disguises, as well as a medical mask over his face. But what struck my friend was that Jackson’s face was a peculiar shade of gray - the color of cigarette ash, he said.
Jackson was a pop force from the very beginning, an acceptable, purifying filter through which the raw and dark roux of black sound could be forced. Jackson was, in the beginning, a kind of anti-Elvis, a polarity reverser who reclaimed pop and soul and infused it with a kind of kiddie innocence. He made good bubble-gum music - it might not have been hip to love the Jackson 5 but the singles “I Want You Back,” “ABC” and “I’ll Be There” were sublimecounter-insurgencies against the sorties of the colonizing faux-soul Osmonds.
“Puppy Love” wasn’t a bad record. But compared to MJ’s early solo work - songs like “Got to Be There,” “I Wanna Be Where You Are,” even the aforementioned “Ben” - Donny was definitely dealing derivative greasy kid stuff.
Those early records with his brothers are enough to credentialize Jackson. He could have retired at 14, spared us the spectacles and been remembered as one of the all-time greats, the successor to Stevie Wonder and Ray Charles - a great song and dance man.
But he wasn’t inclined to retire, and though The Jacksons era can now be read as an awkward age, it still produced the fantastic “Dancing Machine” single, the pleasantly inane “Enjoy Yourself” and “Shake Your Body.”
In retrospect, the Quincy Jones-produced albums Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad that kicked off his full-fledged adult solo career must be considered some of the finest American pop music of the past century, as important and influential as Presley’s Sun recordings. Hear those albums now, and they sound better than they did then, like a dose of the real thing after a couple of decades of imitation funk rock. They pushed through the confining envelope of conventional pop thought.
They kicked out the jams and kicked down the doors where the cross-pollinating Eddie Van Halen was waiting in the wings, strangling his Frankenstein Kramer. Jackson opened up MTV for black - or, as they had it, “dance” - artists with “Beat It.” A lot of MJ haters owe him big time, for he was the one who gave hip-hop access to the suburban bedrooms of white-flight kids.
But if Jackson was a mature artist at the onset of his solo career, like Peter Pan with whom he famously identified, he was determined to never grow up. At the cusp of the 1980s, despite his years of showbiz success, Jackson seemed as naive as he was famous. He seemed to consciously adopt the aura of an alien - he seemed to bean asexual and untouchable creature not unlike E.T.
It says something about our collective mental health, the world’s mental health, that we could embrace such a synthetically sweet being, that we could find ourselves loving this alien. The Michael Jackson of Thriller and “We Are the World” was a fantasy being divorced from messy carnality, suspended in a chilly, self-constructed image cocoon.
In the decade of the AIDS plague, Jacko provided the safest sex of all, a vague, prepubescent tingle of mysterious longing - he was the Jonas Brothers without the promise rings, or maybe more to the point, a kind of Edward Scissorhands figure - an unembraceable, artificial man possessed of the will. (And who, Jackson apologists might point out, was falsely accused of a sex crime.)
Of course, Jackson was not the same as his image. By the end of the 1980s his private life was meat for the tabloids, and his serial “friendships” with children were already inviting scrutiny. (Though, like any savvy celebrity, he had a complicated relationship with the vulgate press - Jackson himself was the source of a lot of the tabloid gossip. He floated the false rumor that he was trying to buy The Elephant Man’s bones and leaked the sensationally creepy photos of himself sleeping in something called a hyperbaric chamber to the National Enquirer.)
BELOVED IMMORTAL
I never came up with anything like a unified field theory of Jackson. He was damaged, he was crazy. There is a lot of evidence that suggests he was a criminal. He was a spendthrift and a deadbeat. What had that to do with me? He was brilliant, he was an otherworldly performer. I liked - I still like - a lot of his records. I never saw anyone who did what he did better.
I am sorry he’s dead, because 50 seems to me a cruelly young age at which to die. Because I believe that people are capable of doing amazing things at any age, that genuine genius is rare and we ought to appreciate whatever gifts are bestowed on us. I am not prepared to argue that Jackson was a good man or a bad man. I only know he had a gift for lifting hearts and we can use that sort of thing around here.
On the other hand, the people at Sony have hinted that there are hundreds of finished yet unreleased Jackson songs sitting in their vaults. It seems likely that Jackson will enjoy a long and prosperous posthumous career. He will in all likelihood be the best-selling recording artist of 2009; before the release of the concert film This Is It and its obligatory “soundtrack” (made up mostly of previously released versions of the hits performed in the movie) album, Jackson had already sold nearly 6 million solo albums since his death. That has injected the flagging industry with a boost similar to the one his Thriller album provided back in 1982.
Jackson may be dead, but the image and noise with which I am acquainted is likely to abide. It may well outlive us all.
Style, Pages 27 on 11/03/2009
Philip Martin
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
The worst fears for Kenny Ortega’s This Is It were that it would beexploitative and sad, a cynical attempt to salvage something from thewreckage of Michael Jackson’s derailed career and the desperatecomeback attempt that was abrogated by the singer’s death June 25.Given the disheartening reports and lurid gossip surrounding Jackson’sdemise, we might have expected to see the merest ghost of Jackson’spast shuffling through the motions of his greatest hits in grimpreparation for what was sure to be a grueling 50-show stand atLondon’s O2 arena.
Instead, what we get is a deeply interesting, occasionally moving andstrangely uplifting portrait of a very odd genius at work. This Jacksonis bizarre but competent, and thoroughly involved with the look, soundand choreography of a vast and complicated show. As difficult as thetabloid rumors make it to believe, this Jackson appears genuinely happyin his work.
Of course, we understand this is a selective portrait, and Ortega — whowas involved in directing these rehearsals as well as this film — couldvery well have chosen to edit out any footage that cast Jackson in aless than saintly light. But there are plenty of voices out therewilling to castigate Jackson as a pedophile and infantilize him as aspooky waif with terrible body image issues and the emotionalintelligence of a toddler. Let’s also acknowledge that there has neverbeen a greater song-and-dance man.
Unlike a lot of concert documentaries, This Is It doesn’t pretend togive us any backstage insight into the star it limns. There are a fewcursory talking-head shots of the (un)lucky dancers and musicians whomade up his last troupe — they uniformly praise the man and marvel attheir fortune.
Backing up Michael Jackson may not be a sure road to stardom, but itcan’t be bad for one’s resume. If you’re looking for an A Star Is Bornmoment, it might be when Jackson leans on his 24-year-old girlieguitarist Orianthi — who handles the Eddie Van Halen break on “BeatIt.” She’s an amazing player, who’s cute enough for viddies and notabove innocuous power pop.
And while the music is well mixed and spot on, it understandably lacksthe feeling and power of an actual concert. Jackson mainly cruisesthrough his catalog’s greatest hits, and the title song — a newcomposition — is as insipid as any he has ever recorded. (Jackson’schief weakness after his mid-1980s peak was his insistence on writinghis own lyrics — he had no gift for it.)
But the man dances — if not with the explosive athleticism of hisprime, with a lithe wit and subtlety that sometimes shames the buffprofessionals who back him up. Jackson is a middle-aged man, presumablyin poor health and suffering from self-induced malnutrition, yet he’sabsolutely mesmerizing, a stick figure who, while his joints may havestiffened a bit, still exhibits a preternatural control over his body’ssilhouette.
Jackson mastered a private gestural language, a physical cuneiformbeyond language through which he was able to connect across cultures.(Had the aliens landed during his lifetime, could we have done betterthan to send MJ as our emissary?) What people miss when they dismissJackson as a “mere” entertainer was his magical command of sound andmotion — his thrilling ability to dance down the furies of hell andheaven. He was a visual — as much as a recording — artist.
Ortega works simply but shrewdly to show this off to good effect, oftenusing a split-screen effect to give us twin Jacksons (in various formsof colorful rehearsal mufti) spinning and sliding and stepping inotherworldly precision or jazzy counterpoint.
In scenes of him working with musicians and choreographers, Jacksoncomes across as a soft-spoken yet stern taskmaster — he insists on ithis way, but he chides his employees “with love” and he’s tuned in tothe sometimes slippery problems of communicating inchoate musicalnotions. “He knows his music,” rhythm guitarist Tommy Organ says, andwe are to understand this is the highest compliment that can be paid.
Ortega also gives us a preview of the aborted concerts, presenting newvideo material for “Smooth Criminal” that has Jackson interacting withRita Hayworth in Gilda and Humphrey Bogart in In a Lonely Place and“Thriller” with updated ghouls. Less engaging is the eco-parable videothat was shot for “Earth Song,” a set piece featuring an endangeredchild that was to have ended with a bulldozer rumbling onto the stage.
That probably would have been overmuch, and one is left with theunsettling idea that this film — which was originally conceived as astraight-to-DVD souvenir for true believers — isn’t more satisfyingthan the London concerts, with their emphasis on golden oldiesnostalgia, would have been. It’s too easy to surmise that Jackson wasonly truly alive while performing, to contrast his apparent alertengagement with his onstage “family” with his real-world isolation anddisconnection from reality.
This Is It is just a footnote to a complex, creative life that cannotbe reduced to a cautionary tale. It is a glimpse of joy, a sequinshining amidst the ashes.
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• iPod friendlyLITTLE ROCK — A Serious Man90Cast: Michael Stuhlbarg, Sari Lennick, Fred Melamed, AaronWolff, Amy Landecker, Jessica Mc-Manus, Richard Kind, Adam Arkin Directors: Joel and Ethan Coen Rating: R, for language, drug use and brief nudity Running time: 100 minutes
In Western popular culture suburbs are so often cast as shrink-wrap for the soul that the idea has become a cliche - all a filmmaker needs to do to convey a sense of banal horror is run a camera down a tidy bourgeois lane lined by wellkept tract houses. Our universe favors entropy, and all our efforts to impose order and decency on the chaos will eventually collapse. Weeds will grow in the ruins of cities, evil will leach through the bones of the honorably inhumed.
Part of being an adult is recognizing our ultimate futility, and deciding to carry on anyway, for the sake of the innocentand to minimize sufferings. Maybe we place a bet on something greater than ourselves, in a life beyond the pain of living; maybe we simply admit to ourselvesthat there are things we cannot know and do our best to be happy. We sublimate our essential emptiness and get with whatever program has been laid out before us: This is what it means to be serious.
Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg) considers himself a serious man. More than once in the Coen brothers’ deeply black, desperately comic A Serious Man, he so proclaims himself. What he means is he has done what he was told to do, he has followed all the rules and he expects to receive whatever benefits accrue: the suburban house, the 2.5 children, the dutiful (if not particularly loving) wife and - after years of filling up university chalkboards with the pure reason of math-based physics - tenure. It doesn’t seem too much to ask.
But bad things are beginning to happen to Larry. His hapless though possibly brilliant brother Arthur (a fearless Richard Kind) has moved into his home, and now spends most of his time in the family bathroom draining a sebaceous cyst. His son Danny (Aaron Wolff) is studying the Torah in anticipation of his bar mitzvah, but he seems more consumed with F Troop, marijuana and the Jefferson Airplane - and in evading the hulking bully to whom he owes $20. (For the pot?) His daughter Sarah (Jessica McManus) is a self-centered sneak thief who spends every available moment (when Arthur doesn’t have the bathroom tied up) washing her hair.
Larry seems as oblivious to the problems of his children as they are heedless of his dreams for them. And now his wife, Judith (Sari Lennick), informs him that their marriage is irreparably broken, and that she wants (needs) a ritual divorce so that she can marry her soul mate, an unctuous, purring man mountain named Sy Ableman (Fred Melamed), who assures Larry that everything will be all right.
And, just as the university committee begins to consider granting Larry tenure, a South Korean student with poor math skills tries to bribe Larry to change his grade and prevent him from losing his scholarship. And the chairman of his department drops by to apprise Larry that someone is sending anonymous letters to the school complaining of Larry’s “turpitude.” (Because they’re anonymous, they won’t be given any weight, he tells Larry. He just wanted him to know.)
Marooned in a local low-rent motel with his grotesque brother, Larry hits bottom and seeks the advice of three rabbis and adivorce attorney (a pleasantly fatted Adam Arkin). The most callow of the rabbis suggests Larry view his recent bad luck streak as a chance to view the world afresh; the more senior one tells him a perplexing story about God’s mysterious ways, and the ancient senior rabbi refuses to see him on the grounds that he’s too busy thinking.
But just as soon as we come to understand Larry as a Job figure, his world begins to brighten. Which, if you’re familiar with the Coen brothers, is a very bad sign indeed.
While the Coens have always dealt in stereotypes (and thus courted the opprobrium of good people), A Serious Man is so grounded in a specific reality - a sparsely treed suburb of Minneapolis in 1967 - that it has the feel of a memoir, a memory piece populated by filtered versions of actual people and places. These are the Coens’ people, and if they treat themroughly we might also assume they love them, if grudgingly. People will complain - and have complained - about the portrayals of the Jewish characters, but the film feels emotionally authentic and genuinely interested in the philosophical questions it raises.
At the very least it is a work of remarkable discipline, as the Coens and their regular collaborators, including cinematographer Roger Deakins, composer Carter Burwell, and production designer Jess Gonchor, have created a pointillistic world from particular Jewish references which, while they are likely to have a more profound resonance with insiders, cue us into the depth of their moral engagement and intelligence. It is possible to find the Coens guilty of giving offense while admiring the quality of their efforts. They are trying very hard to be good.
This article was published today at 3:36 a.m.MovieStyle, Pages 33 on 10/30/2009
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ON FILM Films are like horses: Slow starts often fatal
Friday, October 30, 2009
LITTLE ROCK — One thing I hate about the movies is the way every weekend has become a Darwinian battleground, with those films that draw more customers than others surviving to fight another week while the perceived losers are subject to having their studios pull the plug on their promotional budgets.
Often a film’s fate rests on its performance on the Friday it opens - studio bean counters watch advance ticket sales and pay close attention to how a film performs in its opening hours. Sometimes, a movie’s fate has been decided by Friday evening in Los Angeles.
While the disappointing box-office receipts - about $6.3 million over last weekend - for Cirque du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant may not automatically scuttle Universal’s plans for a sequel or two, it certainly makes the prospect less likely. These days, the usual pattern is for studios to cut their losses and allow box-office losers to sink into oblivion.
That’s tough, given how much effort and care goes into even misbegotten movies. While some of them are genuinely cynical enterprises, most movies aren’t purely capitalistic ventures and most people who make them are seeking a satisfaction beyond a reasonable return on their investment. Cirque du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant is far from a bad film; it is a promising “the adventure begins” scene-setter for what might be an entertaining franchise. If it doesn’t get off the ground, I doubt any of the principals will suffer any longterm harm to their careers, but it’s disheartening to think that a weekend’s worth of shows can be so decisive.
At least we had a great turnout at the special screening in Little Rock, which featured a question-and-answer session with the film’s executive producer Courtney Pledger and lead actor Chris Massoglia. If you didn’t make it and are curious, Levi Agee recorded the session for the Little Rock Film Festival’s blog and you can see it at: http://bit.ly/44ySlG.
HOT SPRINGS WRAP-UP
There simply isn’t enough space in the newspaper - or time in the day - to run everything I’d like to run in this section. In a perfect world, we’d have reviewed every film in the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival before the festival opened. We’d have made them available to potential festivalgoers along with a schedule and maybe some pointed suggestions.
Logistically that’s impossible. And given the robust attendance at the festival, apparently pretty unnecessary from the attendees’ point of view. Plenty of people find out about the festival, and a lot of people go. The screenings we attended were crowded if not quite filled to capacity.
Still, this year’s festival struck me as having one of the best film lineups in the festival’s history, and there are lots of movies that I missed that I intend to track down over the next few weeks. (Including local filmmaker John Sims’ short Crater People, about the people who hunt diamonds at the Crater of Diamonds State Park. It might make a nice double feature with Brian Petty’s Finders Keepers: The Arkansas Diamond Legacy, a film airing on AETN on Nov. 20 and 26.)
And while I was aware of many and had seen a few of the festival films before the festival, I’m always surprised by what grabs me. This year the big surprise was Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home, a film by Jenny Stein that made an eloquent and level-headed case for a reassessment of our relationship with livestock.
I was also immensely entertained by Cass Warner’s excavation of her famous family’s history, The Brothers Warner, which told the Shakespearean story of the rise of the Warner Bros. empire and the gothic betrayal that occludes its roots.
And look for a full review of the Renaud brothers’ Warrior Champions - which was screened at the festival - in these pages next week, in anticipation of the film’s theatrical world premiere Nov. 12, 7 p.m. at the Lakewood Theater in North Little Rock. Tickets are $100 each (a DVD copy of the film is included in the ticket price), and proceeds from the event will be used to establish a scholarship for an Iraq or Afghanistan war veteran from Arkansas to the Clinton School of Public Service.
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MovieStyle, Pages 33 on 10/30/2009