Spring
2003 Midsummer
Volume 2 Issue 3 Write Between the Linesis an exploration and articulation of the obvious and the obscure.
A cavalcade of creation and commentary designed to amuse and bemuse.
At the
2003 Independent Spirit Awards Elvis Costello croons:
"What's so funny 'bout peace, love, and understanding?"
War is a horror show. Remember the flower power poster .
. .
. .
. What if everyone went to the movies instead?
Park
City is the locale for film festivals and festivities that
promote peace, love, and understanding. And a little bit funny.
The following are a few . . .
Notes from Park City 2003
In
the shuttle enroute to Park Cityeavesdropping on seatmates:
One is George Clooney's agent. Another is Oliver Stone's travel
agent. With Screenplay Competition postcards in hand, I am
posing as a HypeFest
special agent.
Screenings
Sundance Film Festival
Thierry Michel's stunning documentary, Iran, Veiled Appearances,
offers pertinent insights into the complexity and diversity
of Iranits clash of civilizations where inhabitants
suffer from the "systematic derangement of the senses,"
and children of the revolution feel "lost in space."
The last scene, Iranian women flying through the air with
the greatest of ease on rainbow colored hang gliders, conjures
an image of liberation over a landscape of constricting dust
and black veiled oppression.
NoDance
Film & Multimedia Festival
Now in Year 6, Direktor Jim Boyd crafts an alternative indie
film and dv event comprised of: "features, shorts, docs,
music videos, panels & parties galore." This year's
program showcased the caliber of talent that continues to
hone indie's edge. Here's a slice:
The
7th Man (Audience Award for Best Short) Director Jason
Liggett takes inspiration from a newspaper article, and along
with DP Matthew Libatique (Requiem for a Dream, Pi),
brings an iconic war photograph to life and the audience to
tears. Another kind of war story is recounted in Shadowboxer
(Grand Jury Award for Best Short in Program 1). Vilka
Tzoura's examination of female teenage violence and the reasons
why is carefully considered is this fictionalized short film
set in the gritty city of New York.
Two
documentaries expand the SoCal state of mind: Dana Brown's
most excellent surf doc Step into Liquid visually enlightens
us to why: "Surfing is not a matter of life and death,
it's more important than that" and Brad Bemis' Venice:
Lost and Found embellishes on Albert Kinney's Venetian
dream, Venice Beach, California"a tidal pool, a
distillation of the greater metropolis" that is Los Angeles.
Featured interviews with Dennis Hopper, Gregory Hines, The
Doors'Ray Manzarek, cameo by Dogtown
and Z-Boys' Skip Engblom.
SheDance
and X-Dance Film Festivals
"Girls Getting' It Done." Misti L. Barnes celebrates
films written, directed, or produced about women. Girls outfitted
in pink tees ushered the audience into Cicero's Restorante
to watch dark matter shorts: In Rush of the Palms,
two hit men reevaluate their day jobs mimicking Mamet patter;
Mind Wars l and ll journeys into the minds and minefields
of two individuals with mental illness. Paige Cameron's directorial
debut: Hills Like White Elephants is an intriguing
interpretation of Ernest Hemingway's classic short story,
marred only by melodramatic music and abrupt cuts.
A
sly line of auburn-haired Cameron's dialogue: "Every
woman wears red sooner or later" could be applied to
one of the X-Dance Festival's short films in which
New York tough chicks carry toy poodles, wear matte crimson
lipstick and make mad love and war. Definitely "Girls
Getting' in on the Action." Definitely WBTL webmaster
Otter's fave!
Stars
and Bars
Cocktails with Matthew and Colleen O'Mara Diamond in Lakota
at The Caledonian Hotelespying Emmylou Harris and entourage
across the way; Tilda Swinton glides past the Sundance Wait
List line for Born Richshe gets in, we do not;
Party Monster and occasional werewolf Seth Green cruising
up Main Street; also on Main Street: Farrah Fawcett in fun
fur, Stanley Tucci on his cel, Aiden Quinn on his cel, cute
Loco Joe boys handing our free coffee drinks and compliments;
those nutty yet strangely endearing TromaDance kids
handing out party invites; chatting up the congenial Forest
Whitaker at NoDance; running 'round with the lovely
Indian actress Delna Rastomjee and her elegant beau, entertainment
attorney Alan Abrams; listening to Stephen Baldwin bray at
the Bad Ass Cafe; making eyes at Steve Buscemi at Zona Rosa
while lunching with Santa Cruz District Attorney turned filmmaker
Dennis Wong. Look for his doc on California gangs in 2004.
Reading
Modern
Drunkard Magazine on the outbound shuttle. Literary
Libation! Our driver is Samoan. And a bounty hunter when not
shuttling the "People in Black" to and fro in the
Park City snow.