Written for Sight & Sound, December 2023. – EK
Monday, 24 February 2025
Me and My Gal (Raoul Walsh, 1932)
Thursday, 20 February 2025
Demetrius and the Gladiators (Delmer Daves, 1954)
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A very Scope film |
Note on Demetrius and the Gladiators, in the occasion of the new restoration of the film premiered at Il Cinema Ritrovato 2024. It was restored in 4K by The Walt Disney Studios and The Film Foundation in collaboration with Academy Film Archive at Cineric and Audio Mechanics laboratories from the 35mm original negative, a 35mm interpositive and a 35mm internegative. – EK
The trials and tribunals of Demetrius (Victor Mature), from a freed slave to the protector of the robe of Jesus, to gladiatorship and the illicit relationship with Claudius’s wife, Messalina (Susan Hayward). Straying away in a life of debauchery, Demetrius is reawakened to Christian values thanks to Peter the Fisherman while there is a good dose of lust, blood and tiger-fighting in between. This Bible pulp (“I never thought of Jesus being so tall”) culminates in the assassination of Caligula and a return to reason after Claudius becomes the new Caesar. Sequel to the first CinemaScope film The Robe (1953), this is the 1950s “muscular Christianity” that the late Terence Davies, who saw this film when he was nine, described as “dazzling and profane” and belonging to a time when God was in every cinema, “like a drug." Muscular indeed as Mature fights three tigers at once and profane as the film’s campy theology takes him to sermon a lascivious Hayward lying down in her designer dress.
Wednesday, 19 February 2025
How to Make Use of Leisure Time: Painting – A Film NOT by Abbas Kiarostami
How to Make Use of Leisure Time: Painting (1977), a short educational documentary widely credited to and distributed as a film by Abbas Kiarostami, has nothing to do with him. He is not the director of this film.
Currently, MK2, which holds the international rights to the Kiarostami catalogue owned by Kanoon, rents this film as a Kiarostami work. Who first misattributed it, and why—whether intentionally or by mistake—is unclear. But here’s my guess:
Tuesday, 28 January 2025
Merrily We Go to Hell (Dorothy Arzner, 1932)
Originally titled Jerry and Joan during production, this charming and exquisitely directed pre-code melodrama was later renamed to the slightly controversial Merrily We Go to Hell. The film features Sylvia Sidney as a wealthy woman who marries a journalist (brilliantly portrayed by Fredric March), only to struggle with her husband’s alcoholism and his unexpected reunion with an old flame. Typical of its studio of production, Paramount, and reflective of some of the bolder pre-code films, the marriage—which quickly deteriorates—is depicted in an open, sophisticated manner, set against the backdrop of lavish art deco sets.
Monday, 20 January 2025
Ebrahim Golestan and the Restoration of Iran’s Cinematic Heritage [A free evening of film and discussion at V&A]
Ebrahim Golestan and the Restoration of Iran’s Cinematic Heritage at Victoria & Albert Museum
Ebrahim Golestan (1922–2023) is widely regarded as one of Iran’s most significant filmmakers and a pioneer of the movement later dubbed the Iranian New Wave. Join us for a screening of three of his ground-breaking documentary films, produced prior to the 1979 revolution and recently restored to their original brilliance:
• Yek Atash (A Fire, 1961)
• Teppeh-ha-ye Marlik (The Hills of Marlik, 1964)
• Ganjineh-ha-ye Gohar (The Crown Jewels of Iran, 1965)
While exploring Iran’s history, geography, and the arts, Golestan’s documentaries are both politically subversive and visually striking.
Saturday, 28 December 2024
La dama de la antorcha. 100 años de Columbia Pictures
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The Lady with the Torch: Columbia Pictures, 1929-1959 travels to Filmoteca Española in Madrid. My essay, in Spanish, here.
Thursday, 7 November 2024
Anatomy of a Murder (Otto Preminger, 1959)
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Otto Preminger with Billy Strayhorn and Duke Ellington |
Otto Preminger concluded the 50s – a decade already marked by some of his most audacious work – with this courtroom drama about a country lawyer called on to defend an army lieutenant accused of murdering a bar owner who has allegedly raped the lieutenant’s wife. It is widely celebrated as one of the greatest American films.
Based on a real case, Anatomy of a Murder was adapted from a 1957 book by former prosecutor John D. Voelker, which was still a “New York Times” bestseller when the film went into production. Aside from the superb central cast, which includes James Stewart, Lee Remick, Ben Gazzara and George C. Scott, the role of the judge went to real-life judge Joseph N. Welch (who is also seen calmly upbraiding Senator Joseph McCarthy in the documentary Point of Order). The film is shot entirely on location, where the actual crime and trial had taken place. The court scenes that make up the majority of the film were shot in sequence, providing the actors with an enriching sense of realism. The result is perfection.
Saturday, 2 November 2024
Cinema is a Machine of Empathy
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The Stranger and the Fog |
“CINEMA IS A MACHINE OF EMPATHY”: RESTORING AND CURATING IRANIAN’S CINEMATIC HERITAGE.
An interview with Ehsan Khoshbakht
By André Habib (Université de Montréal)
The international recognition of Iranian cinema parallels its presence on the world festival circuit, from Gaffari’s 1963 Night of the Hunchback, through Kiarostami’s Palme d’or for The Taste of Cherry to Rossoulof’s in extremis addition to the 2024 Cannes Festival selection. These last few years, festivals (in particular Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Locarno) have been pivotal in diagnosing the “state of affairs” in the Islamic Republic of Iran, the ongoing creative struggle and resistance filmmakers have opposed to the regime. We could also add that, over the past ten years, it is also via festivals, and particularly those specialized in showcasing film restorations, that we have witnessed a reappraisal and renewed appreciation for works, mostly shot before the revolution, that had fallen into relative oblivion and which all, in some respect, display eloquent forms of politic and poetic resistance. It is safe to say that nowhere is this truer than at the Cineteca di Bologna, via its now world-renowned Cinema Ritrovato festival and through the work of the Immagine ritrovata laboratory. Crucial to this new wave of rediscoveries is Ehsan Khoshbakht, who has, since 2018, worked as co-director of the Cinema Ritrovato festival, apart from curating many ambitious programs across the world (notably, recently, the October 13th to November 27th MoMA program, Iranian Cinema Before the Revolution, spanning fifty years and presenting close to 70 feature and short films). He is also a filmmaker, an architect and an essential figure, with others, of the contemporary reassessment of the importance and richness of the history of Iranian cinema. Shortly before the launch of the Fall of 2023 MoMA cycle, we had a chance to interview him for this special issue of Regards.
London Jazz Festival | Jazz on Screen: Symphonies in Black – Duke Ellington Shorts
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Jazz on Screen: Symphonies in Black: Duke Ellington Shorts
Tue 19 Nov 2024, 18:30, Location: Barbican Cinema 3
Introduction to the screening by Ehsan Khoshbakht
Join us at the Barbican for a special screening event featuring 16 captivating short films that highlight the extraordinary musical legacy of Duke Ellington and his Orchestra. Spanning nearly a quarter of a century (1929-1953), these films showcase Ellington’s performances in a variety of settings, often accompanied by dancers and singers, including the legendary Billie Holiday in Symphony in Black: A Rhapsody of Negro Life. This particular film fluidly transitions between Ellington composing in solitude, leading his band in a tuxedo at a concert, and artistic depictions of African American life, including a moving sequence with Billie Holiday portraying heartbreak similar to Bessie Smith's iconic film appearance six years prior.
Tuesday, 29 October 2024
The Brighton Strangler | Screening Announcement
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The Brighton Strangler
Extended intro by Ehsan Khoshbakht
A Christmas thriller with a murderous twist in which a theatre star with amnesia believes himself to be a serial killer.
Part of Projecting the Archive (A BFI Southbank programme by Jo Botting)
Monday 16 December 2024 18:35 | NFT2
Director: Max Nosseck
Featuring: John Loder, June Duprez, Michael St Angel, Miles Mander
USA 1945. 68min. 35mm | A BFI National Archive print
When a theatre is bombed in wartime London, a famous actor loses his memory and assumes the personality of the character he’s been playing on stage: The Brighton Strangler. British expat stars John Loder and June Duprez bring authenticity to their roles – much needed to counterbalance the Hollywood depiction of Britain’s south coast. Director Max Nosseck was a colourful character, best-known for making low-budget crime dramas across different countries, of which this is a deliciously melodramatic example. Taking place over the theatre’s Christmas closure, this RKO B-movie makes a perfect alternative seasonal offering.