Chaz following up Ebert's Presentation |
This film too has a unique relationship with the Ebertfest
opening film, Joe Versus the Volcano (1990). Both films subject the matter of a
man being sideswiped with impending death and the realization of their own
mortality while coming out better after fates rescue. It’s certain that Ebert
was very deliberate and cognizant that these two films must play at the
festival together.
It is clear this documentary resonates closely to Ebert
personally not only because of his own near brushes with death, but also
because Roger Ebert and Paul Cox have been great friends since 1983 when they
first met at The Chicago International Film Festival, after a screening of
Cox’s film Man of Flowers (1983).
Once the film finished Chaz welcomed Paul Cox to the stage
for a Q&A panel, stating that he has been to Ebertfest many time before.
With his history at the festival She suggests that an Ebertfest returnee
competition should be implemented in the vein of the hosting competition
between Alec Baldwin and Steve Martin on SNL. Chaz also makes it clear that the
reason Cox wasn't being handed a Gold thumb award is because he has already
received one from a past visit, and the award could actually be seen in the On
Borrowed Time documentary. I have to admit, I didn't catch the cameo.
Chaz Ebert, Paul Cox, and festival director Nate Kohn Photo courtesy of Reel Times: Reflections of Cinema |
- Being a director himself, Cox found it difficult to be on the opposite end of the camera.
- Cox begged direct David Bradbury to take out footage of the actual transplant operation saying, “That piece of meat was me.” But ultimately concluding that he deserved it after filming so many vulnerable nude scenes in his own films.
- Some of the narration from the film read by Paul Cox was derived from the book from which he wrote.
- With a history of being impatient and being a man to never have a true love, Cox implies that his experience has changed him for the better, expressing, “I’ve never loved like I love now.”
- When asked what 3 films he would like to have in a retrospective of his body of work, he chooses, Vincent (1987), Man of Flowers (1983), A Woman’s Tale (1991), and Innocence (2000). Cox then humorously apologized to Chaz because it would have to be four films screened at his retrospective.
Next up was a screening of Wild and Weird, a
collection of short subjects and experimental cinema from the silent era.
Included Shorts -
"Dream of the Rarebit Fiend" (1906) |
- "Dream of the Rarebit Fiend" (1906)
- "The Red Spectre" (1907),
- “The Acrobatic Fly” (1910), I guess PETA hates this short.
- "The Thieving Hand" (1908)
- "Princess Nicotine or the Smoke Fairy” (1909)
- "Artheme Swallows His Clarinet" (1912)
- “The Cameraman’s Revenge” (1912), Stop motion dead insects.
- “The Pet” (1921), Animated.
- "Filmstudie" (1926)
- "The Life and Death of 9413: A Hollywood Extra" (1928)
Before the
screening, film Professor David Bordwell from the University of Wisconsin
provided a brief history of the silent film era. He compared the early period to YouTube, where most of the subjects are short and humorous. He also gave a
rundown of the history of showplaces, starting with nickelodeons to
“purpose-built" movie houses and theaters dedicated almost only to films,
and finally to the “picture palaces” of the 1920’s, which The Virginia Theatre falls into, built in 1921. Professor Bordwell also provided a history on the
different theaters and former theaters in the Champaign-Urbana area, telling us
locals that we live in a “layered history of cinema.” That statement made me
feel proud in a way.
The short
subjects screened with the accompaniment of the three-man musical ensemble, The
Alloy Orchestra, who not only performed the pieces, they also wrote them. The
Alloy Orchestra is known for using non-conventional instruments in their
performances. I over heard a festival attending say that they even use chamber
pot in their performances. My ear wasn't keen enough to catch those sounds but
I’m certain I heard a theremin, which was exciting. Where each short had its
own unique look and style as a short film, The Alloy Orchestra was able to pull
each short together, unifying them, while at the same time accentuating their
enticing and distinguished differences.
Ben Foutch finished out Day 3 screening of the Iranian film, A Separation (2011). His coverage will appear in Ebertfest Day 3: Part 2.