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venerdì 20 maggio 2011

Basquiat



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DOWNTOWN 81
Edo Bertoglio, 1981/2000

A feature film starring the legendary American artist Jean Michel Basquiat (1960-1988). Basquiat was a painter, graffiti artist, poet and musician when he played the lead in this film, which vividly depicts the explosive downtown New York art and music scene of 1980-81. Basquiat was an important figure on that scene. He had yet to have his first exhibition. But his paintings and words were part of the city landscape. Today, his paintings hang in museums and important collections around the world and he is internationally recognized as one of the most important artists of the late twentieth century.

The film is a day in the life of a young artist who needs to raise money to reclaim the apartment from which he has been evicted. He wanders the downtown streets carrying a painting he hopes to sell, encountering friends, whose lives (and performances) we peek into. He finally manages to sell his painting to a wealthy female admirer, but he’s paid by check. Low on cash, he spends the evening wandering from club to club, looking for a beautiful girl he had met earlier, so he’ll have a place to spend the night.

Basquiat is a natural actor - witty, radiant, the epitome of coolness and artistic exuberance. The cast includes Deborah Harry, and leading bands of the era including Kid Creole and the Coconuts, James White and the Blacks, DNA, Tuxedomoon, The Plastics, and Walter Steding and the Dragon People. Also heard on the soundtrack are rap legend Melle Mel, John Lurie, Lydia Lunch, Suicide, Vincent Gallo, Kenny Burrell and Basquiat’s own band, Gray.

The film is not a documentary, but presents a slightly exaggerated, romantic and magical version of the reality of the time. The entire cast is composed of the movers and shakers on the downtown scene. In 1981, business problems interrupted the completion of post-production, and parts of the film were lost in Europe. Finally after much searching, the missing materials were located in 1998. Post production was begun in 1999 and finished in 2000, supervised by Maripol and Glenn O’Brien.

Jean Michel Basquiat was 19 years old when he was cast in Downtown 81. His twentieth birthday came during the shooting of the film. Basquiat was already a notorious member of the downtown art scene, known for his witty, omnipresent "Samo" graffiti, his unique band Gray, and his general creativity and stylishness. He was a painter without a studio, making art with whatever was at hand, sweatshirts, refrigerators, doors and discarded wood. Around this time he met Glenn O’Brien, who was working on an article about graffiti. They became friends and Glenn wrote the main part for Jean Michel. During filming, the young artist lived in the production office, where he had his first real studio space. In 1981, Basquiat was one of the art stars of the "New York New Wave Show" at PS1 Institute for Art, where he exhibited several paintings. It was the beginning of a meteoric rise, and within a year he was one of the hottest artists in the world.

THE CLASH

HELL W10
(Joe Strummer, 1983)

This is a bizarre silent, black and white short film directed by the late Joe Strummer, the Clash's frontman. The basic plot surrounds a man named Earl (Clash bassist Paul Simonon) and a drug-lord/porn director named Socrates (their guitarist/singer Mick Jones). Earl's girlfriend gets involved with Socrates and his business, and soon enough Earl becomes the man's number one enemy. Socrates tries to get his goons on Earl's case, especially after he hocks a batch of Socrates' "special" porn, but Earl manages to wrangle up a group of his friends to rebel against them. He's clearly not going to go down without a fight.


martedì 10 maggio 2011

MEXICO