Category Archives: Films

Film preview – Searching for Sugar Man

We are willing to bet you that you will come out of the cinema after watching this film and head straight for the nearest music store, or download the music immediately from iTunes. The film, Searching for Sugar Man, is a documentary, but having already won the Special Jury Prize and the World Cinema Audience Award for Documentary at this year’s Sundance Festival, and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize, as well as winning second place at the Tribeca Festival, you know that it has to be special. And it is.

The story is true of course, but it is one which is barely believable, even when the film draws to a close. (And you will not want it to end anyway). Sixto Rodriguez, a singer songwriter of Mexican descent, lived in Detroit and sang in less than fabulous bars there, including one called The Sewer. Two record producers, Dennis Coffey and Mike Theodore, signed him to make his first album called Cold Fact in 1970 and a second album Coming from Reality followed which was produced by famed music producer, Steve Rowland. But neither of these amazing offerings became a hit in the US, despite the fact that all three of the record producers worked with many huge stars, both before and after working with Rodriguez. It fell to the South African market to buy his records, and he became a musical legend there. His songs, in the words of one person interviewed in the film, were ‘the soundtrack of our youth.’ This was the South Africa of apartheid, of oppression. His songs appeared to speak directly to the people at the heart of that struggle, and they simply loved him.

The music is sort of Bob Dylan but better. It is quite mellow, but with enough lyrical twists and turns to engage you. And in our view his music is better than Dylan in many respects, principally that you can understand what he is singing.

In the opening sequence of the film you might think that you are on the Pacific Highway in California, but this is not possible as the car is driving on the left hand side. It is only when you are told that it is Cape Town that you realise the film is starting on a different continent with staggeringly beautiful scenery. This proves to be a world away from the streets of Detroit.

There are some unanswered questions, including the destination of money earned from the sale of the records, but we think it is just as well that those areas were left unexplored, at least for the time being. The intrigue and mystery might easily have been compromised, and a great film spoiled. But the  team behind it knew what they were doing.

It is the work of Director, Malik Bendjelloul. Based in Stockholm, Malik Bendjelloul has been directing documentaries for twelve years, primarily based on musicians. In 2001, Bendjelloul directed the first ever documentary about German electronic pioneers Kraftwerk. He has also made a documentary series about the history of heavy metal as well as some single documentaries, collaborating with such iconic artists as Björk, Sting, Elton John, Rod Stewart, Madonna, Mariah Carey, U2 and Kylie Minogue. Last autumn Bendjelloul directed a filmed concert with Prince.

Bendjelloul has also worked as director and creative producer for Swedish Television’s international cultural weekly show Kobra, where he made short documentaries covering a wide range of stories. Among the subjects were the First Earth Battalion – the American army division who tried to teach their soldiers to walk through walls; and a profile on Alfred Merhan, a man who has been living in Charles de Gaulle airport for 18 years and who became the inspiration for Steven Spielberg’s THE TERMINAL. Other subjects have included the controversial story of British pop band The KLF burning a million pounds, and a film exploring the rumours surrounding Paul McCartney’s death.

He had worked on Sugar Man for a long time before meeting up with the Producers Simon Chinn and John Battsek who helped complete the film. Bendejelloul said:- “In 2006, after five years making TV documentaries in Sweden, I spent six months travelling around Africa and South America looking for good stories. In Cape Town I met Stephen “Sugar” Segerman, who told me about Rodriguez. I was completely speechless I hadn’t heard a better story in my life. This was five years ago and I have been working on this film more or less every day since then.”

The producer Simon Chinn has already won Oscars and other plaudits and you will possibly know him for his most recent films Project Nim and Man on Wire (the latter did win the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance). It became Rotten Tomatoes best-reviewed film of all time.

In 2005, Chinn established his production company, Red Box Films, to produce MAN ON WIRE (taking inspiration from Philippe Petit, who kept his ideas for future projects, including his high wire walk between the Twin Towers, in a red box under his bed) and it currently has a slate of projects – including feature documentaries, feature films and television dramas – at various stages of production and development.

We loved it, and we are struggling to tell you about it in too much detail since we really do not want to spoil it for you. It is the story of Rodriguez, an American singer, his music and his life. Maybe that is all you ought to know before you storm the doors of your nearest cinema from 27 July 2012 when it is available on general release. Then sit back and prepare to be amazed by the story of a singer songwriter who was bigger than Elvis in South Africa.

Searching for Sugar Man opens in the UK today 27 July 2012.

Photo © StudioCanal

 

Film Review – You Say You Want A Revolution? Let’s Gdansk

Polish Roulette – Sztos 2

Comedy

Polish with English sub-titles.

Cert 15. 105 mins

Together with rationing it is an even colder and slushier Advent in Poland 1981 as the Solidarity movement, simmering in the Gdansk shipyards, provokes the imposition of martial law. But guys still have to make a buck somehow, and dodgy deals in foreign currencies, where the Dollar reigns supreme, is a thriving business – and a very dangerous one – where the Secret Police are involved.

Meanwhile, for rough-diamond conmen/card-sharps, Sonny (Cezary Pazura) and Janek (Borys Szyc) their sleight of hand trickery remains profitable – as long as they remain alive. Conning half your money back from the Militia just after you’ve bribed them certainly compromises that intention.

Roulette -Sztos 2 is a hustle and scam grifter-buddy road movie with a morality-tale denouement sting. There are plenty of engagingly vulgar comedy set-pieces, such as Sonny and Janek entertaining two ladies of profession affection. In the giddy throes of priapic consummation, the ladies’ partner, on seeking purchase on the spinning turntable, inadvertently discovers scratch/mixing years before the bros in d’hood had a clue.

Meanwhile, as ominous tank-tracks rumble outside, Sonny rumbles something very unexpected inside Victoria’s underwear. The later ‘lock-in’ buddy booze-up scene and subsequent karaoke carnage is well-flagged, gauche in its contrivance and all the more entertaining for it.

Whilst allowing for generous slapstick comic license, Roulette/Szetos 2 sustains a pithy, non-self reverential, satirical swipe at totalitarianism’s bungling, but nonetheless, brutal suffocation set against Everyman’s struggle against the odds.

The context of Solidarity remains in the background, although one might do well to keep it in mind at journey’s end. The film’s ethos posits the theory that, more than anything, Solidarity’s eventual overthrow of Communism was not predicated on the struggle to escape the shackles of oppression. More, that eating pickled cabbage, morning, noon and night and wearing those hideous polyester flares and delta-wing rayon shirt collars was the ultimate catalyst for the Velvet (not crushed, one hopes) Revolution.

The plot, such as it is, climaxes with the guys ‘stinging’ the Secret Police out of their shady currency stash, the MO being to get them stoned on a jar of hallucinogenic canapés and hash-cakes; which they do with ambiguous success following a highly diverting Hippy-Kitsch psychedelic freak-out tableau.

Amusingly engaging with a cunning plan. Recommended.

Frieda’s DVD predicted to be a hit

Frieda Morrison has added another string to her bow. A year of filming, a year of editing and the result is The Turning of a Year, a unique snapshot of the village of Finzean from harvest 2008 to harvest 2009.

This very special DVD diary was a community project reflecting life in the Deeside community of Finzean.

“Angus and Alison Farquharson asked me to suggest some ideas on how to celebrate their family’s 400th anniversary on Finzean, which happened to co-incide with the Homecoming in 2009,” explained award-winning broadcaster and documentary maker, Frieda Morrison. “I suggested making a video diary of the community during the build up and the year of the event.”

Frieda has lived in the Finzean area for many years. She’s an award-winning journalist and broadcaster with more than 26 years experience of producing programmes for BBC Scotland. During her years producing and presenting radio and television programmes, she has earned the reputation of being one of the country’s most successful broadcasters, winning a Green Bafta and a New York Media Festival Award for her documentaries.

The Finzean project was unlike anything she had tackled before when work began on it in October 2008.

“Angus was my second grip in the first few weeks, but he had other commitments and he was still Lord Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire at the time,” she recalled, adding that this was her first time behind the camera. “I eventually got the hang of it.”

The Turning of a Year was created in music, words and song and records the changing seasons, the folks and their festivities from the farmers’ ball to fireworks and  hogmany to harvest thanksgiving. There are interviews with residents who have lived in Finzean all their days as had their forebears, with those who returned to visit during that year, and with in-aboot comers who have been absorbed into the community. And there’s music.  Fiddler Paul Anderson is there and so is Finzean resident and bothy ballad king Hector Riddell. Frieda wrote the music which accompanies the stunning footage of the spectacular countryside through the seasons and one tune is dedicated to the late Ab Littlejohn whose contribution to the film is so special.

“We recorded some of the music in my house.  One of the rooms has excellent acoustics and invited some of the best musicians in Scotland, many of who live locally, to participate,” Frieda said.  “If you mix Paul Anderson with four part harmony singers, a whistle player and an autoharp player you get a rather special result.”

Another very special feature of the DVD is the amazing quality of light which Frieda captured, as did Joseph Farquharson, an ancestor of the present Farquharson family and a well-known artist whose work remains a favourite Christmas card scene.

A sense of community runs throughout the DVD. “Because the Year of the Homecoming happened to coincide with the 400th anniversary of the Farquharsons of Finzean it was decided to celebrate the occasion by inviting as many people as possible who had been to Finzean school to a garden party at Finzean House,” Angus explained. “400 attended, including some members of the Clan Farquharson Association. A concert in Finzean Hall, a thanksgiving service in Finzean Church and a family picnic were also held to mark a very special weekend. People attended from all over the world and it was all recorded for the DVD.”

There’s something very touching about the finished film and most people who have seen it find themselves welling up at the affectionate look at a genuinely close-knit community.  However it is not a sentimentalised, rose-tinted one of a community set in aspic.  The school role is healthy, there are flourishing businesses such as the farm shop and the water mill. But there is also the feel-good factor so often associated with Sunday-evening television programmes.

While devoting two years of her life to this project, Frieda also completed an MSc in management at the Robert Gordon University Business School and produced a CD of her own songs. She also set up her own website and blog which you can access here.

The DVD will be launched at a gathering in Finzean on November 19 and will be on sale in the farm shop, price  £15.

“The finished result is a personal triumph and will become a classic of its kind,” predicts Angus Farquharson.