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Bucking the gallery trend for picking kids fresh from MFA programs, the
moving-image portion of this spring's Whitney Biennial (Whitney Museum
of Art, 945 Madison Avenue, 800-WHITNEY) focuses more on established
names rather than promoting lesser-knowns, perhaps on the logic that
even the most celebrated avant-garde filmmakers remain relative
outsiders to the art world. So while the Biennial is usually the place
to catch a glimpse of hot young artists, its 2006 film and video
program will be showcasing the other end of the age spectrum: The slate
includes more than a few avant-garde moviemakers who were already
stirring things up during the Johnson administration. Along with
Kenneth Anger's magical classics Invocation of My Demon Brother and Lucifer Rising (April 22), the museum screens one of his newest works, the video Mouse Heaven
(May 13), a fantastically perverse look at Mickey through the artifacts
of one overweeningly accomplished collector of Disneyana. Even rarer is
a reading by poet Ira Cohen, who will show his 20-minute psychedelic
"maximalist" thrift-store costumer The Invasion of the Thunderbolt Pagoda (March
17, May 12), an all-but-lost lysergic "alchemical journey" starring
Tony Conrad and Angus Maclise that promises a glimpse of "Heavenly Blue
Mylar Pavilions." Michael Snow speeds up his own 1968 pad-trip Wavelength with a DVD re-do, WVLNT (Wavelength for Those Who Don't Have the Time. Originally 45 Minutes, Now 15!)
(March 18, April 23), which, as its name suggests, compacts his 1968
film by superimposing its beginning, middle, and end. Out of the
younger filmmakers on view—the under-60 set—Jennifer Reeves's masterful
post–9-11 psychodrama The Time We Killed (March 25, May 7)
screens again for those who missed its run last fall. Short works by
Martha Colburn, Joe Gibbons, Lewis Klahr, and others unspool at the
Whitney's film and video gallery throughout the season; ongoing video
installations by Ryan Trecartin and Cameron Jamie will reward the
sit-through viewer.
Of course, aficionados of experimental cinema in New York don't
have to make do with the Biennial to get their visionary fix:
Institutions like Anthology (32 Second Avenue, 212-864-1760) and MOMA
(11 West 53rd Street, 212-708-9400) serve it up year-round. Spring
highlights at Anthology include an all-April tribute to one-man film
lab BB Optics, run by filmmaker Bill Brand; the series includes films
restored or otherwise tweaked by Brand, ranging from works by Saul
Levine, Amy Taubin, and Bradley Eros to a collection of Super 8 films
by Nixon's White House staff, confiscated by the FBI in 1973. Anthology
also hosts a program of new video art from Shanghai and Beijing (May
19–21). Notable Anthology one-off shows include new work by
auto-portraitist identity-shifter Shannon Plumb (April 1) and a
selection of films by and featuring Buster Keatonesque performer Stuart
Sherman (April 2). Meanwhile, MOMA offers an expansive memorial tribute
to video art pioneer Nam June Paik (May 1–22), and the world premiere
of Marcel Dzama's short The Lotus Eaters (April 22). Gaining
white cube notoriety for his spooky-twee ink drawings, Dzama makes
films in the neo-antique vein of fellow Winnipegger Guy Maddin; also
screening is Dzama's Spike Jonze collaboration Sad Ghost. The tail end of May brings MOMA's massive Tommorrowland
(May 25–August 31), a series devoted to the students and faculty of
CalArts' film and video program, whose work often evinces a scrappy
materialism and soulful sense of landscape, including redoubtable
experimentalists Deborah Stratman, Travis Wilkerson, and Naomi Uman, as
well as a slew of enticing lesser-knowns.
Beyond the institutions, spring brings a number of promising
gallery shows and micro-cinematic screenings displaying the work of a
younger generation. Williamsburg's Ocularis (70 North 6th Street,
Brooklyn, 718-388-8713) programs a one-woman show (March 20) by Texas
hotshot Eileen Maxson, a transmedia Cindy Sherman for the MySpace
generation; Foxy Production (617 West 27th Street, 212-239-2758)
premieres new videos by Michael Bell-Smith that play with '80s video
games and '90s pop (April 27–May 27); and John Connolly Presents (625
West 27th Street, 212-337-9563) installs a neo-psychedelic work by
former Forcefield clanner Ara Peterson (April 1–May 6). Art space
Participant Inc (95 Rivington, 212-254-4334) mounts "Xanadu" (April
9–May 14), a four-channel installation by Robert Boyd, remixing
apocalyptic footage of the Mansons, Heaven's Gate, and other bits of
suicide, homicide, and genocide. Sounds like something Hollywood Babylon author Kenneth Anger might be heading downtown to check out when he's in New York.
A selective preview compiled and written by Leo Goldsmith, Pete
L'Official, Jaime Mastromonica, Matt Singer, and Drew Tillman.
Don't Come Knocking
March 17
Wim Wenders's latest Teutonic reading of the American West
re-teams him with writer-star Sam Shepard for the first time since
their 1984 masterpiece, Paris, Texas. Touting a soundtrack featuring guitarist Marc Ribot (filling in for Ry Cooder), Don't Come Knocking follows a Broken Flowers premise that fits snugly with Wenders's theme of lusty men on the road to ruin (and back).
Find Me Guilty
March 17
Vin Diesel (now with 50 percent more hair!) stars in this true
story of a gangster who refuses to turn state's evidence and acts as
his own attorney at trial. The film is directed by the prodigiously
litigious Sidney Lumet; he's made four films and one television series
about lawyers and the law since 1990.
Thank You for Smoking
March 17
Jason Reitman (son of Ivan) makes his feature debut with a funny
if glib satire of the big tobacco lobby. A stellar cast (Aaron Eckhart,
Robert Duvall, William H. Macy, Maria Bello, and more) should make this
adaptation of Christopher Buckley's novel worth a look.
V for Vendetta
March 17
Advance word is very strong about this dystopian thriller based on a brilliant graphic novel by Alan Moore (From Hell)
and David Lloyd. Longtime Wachowski brothers associate James McTeigue
directs their screenplay, in which a lone terrorist (or patriot, if you
prefer) attempts to destroy England's totalitarian regime by, among
other things, blowing up Big Ben.
Brick
March 31
Those confident of Veronica Mars's status as best teen
chick private-dick drama on TV will be excited for writer-director Rian
Johnson's debut feature, a noirish SoCal HS mystery starring the newly
excellent Joseph Gordon-Levitt, last seen pining for his perverted
Little League coach in Gregg Araki's well-crafted Mysterious Skin.
Inside Man
March 24
Spike Lee re-ups with Denzel Washington for a fourth time to brush the amorphous disappointment that was She Hate Me off his shoulders with a twisty police procedural that basks in Denzel's post– Training Day
roguishness. The ever exceptional Clive Owen will surely do what he can
with the rote role of dapper bank robber, matching wits with
Washington's detective and, um, Jodie Foster, who apparently enjoys
confined spaces.
Lady Vengeance
March 24
The concluding chapter of Park Chanwook's "revenge trilogy," Lady Vengeance is sure to be in grisly keeping with its predecessors, Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and Oldboy.
L'Enfant
March 24
Belgian Bresson-fanciers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne palmed
another Palme d'Or with this gray little tale of a petty thief (Jérémie
Renier) who doesn't exactly take his daddy duties to heart.
Lonesome Jim
March 24
Indie godhead Steve Buscemi directs Casey Affleck in this tale
of a troubled slacker who returns to his dysfunctional family and is
redeemed by the love of a good woman. But it's totally different from Garden State. This one is set in Indiana.
Drawing Restraint 9
March 29
For some, the prospect of a new Matthew Barney film may be as
alluring as, well, dental surgery, but for others, the release of
another gooey Barney mash-up (this time: Bj throat-singing, whaling,
Will Oldham, amputation, and, of course, Vaseline) will whet the
appetite for at least eight more films.
ATL
March 31
From Drumline and TLC–Boyz II Men producer Dallas Austin comes
this match made in heaven: hip-hop and roller-skating. C'mon, you'd
have been this excited even if the film kept its working (and better?)
title, Jellybeans. Tip Harris, whom you may know as rap's
Rubberband Man —the self-professed King of the South, T.I.—stars;
feature debutant Chris Robinson directs.
Awesome; I Fuckin' Shot That!
March 31
At a stop on their 2004 tour, the Beastie Boys gave 50 of their
fans cameras and told them to shoot the concert however they saw fit.
Audiences will have to decide if the result is a radical new take on
the classic concert film or merely an invitation to a wicked case of
motion sickness.
Basic Instinct 2
March 31
Fourteen years after her legs uncrossed their way into America's
heart, Sharon Stone's nether regions are back in the role that made
them a star. This time Stone's Catherine Tramell is scheming and
screwing her way across Europe, where David Morrissey's psychiatrist
falls under her spell. Stone, who turns 48 this month, must know a good
physical trainer or a great airbrush artist.
Slither
March 31
If anyone can reinvigorate the horror-comedy genre, it's writer-director James Gunn (Tromeo and Juliet) and star Nathan Fillion, who brought a devil-may-care charisma and subtle comic timing to last year's Serenity.
Here he plays a small-town sheriff battling alien slugs that turns
people into hideous monsters. Those poor alien slugs, they really need
to get a better publicist.
The Benchwarmers
April 7
If you're a Rob Schneider fan we've got good news and bad news.
The good news is Schneider stars in The Benchwarmers, a
losers-make-good sports comedy co-starring David Spade andNapoleon Dynamite's Jon Heder. The bad news? You're a Rob Schneider fan.
Free Zone
April 7
Now infamous for the controversy that attended Natalie Portman's
canoodling with co-star Aki Avni near Jerusalem's Western Wall, Amos
Gitai's Free Zone might be more notable as the first Israeli
film shot in Jordan. The film follows a young Jewish American woman's
aimless cab ride into Jordan's "free zone," with a middle-aged Israeli
woman (Hanna Laszlo) at the helm.
Friends With Money
April 7
Writer-director Nicole Holofcener's first film in five years
sports a veritable Murderers' Row of indie actresses: Joan Cusack,
Catherine Keener, Frances McDormand, and, batting cleanup, Jennifer
Aniston, as the sole directionless single among a group of married,
successful friends.
Lucky You
April 7
From Eminem (8 Mile) to chicks 'n' heels (In Her Shoes)
to his latest, a drama set in the world of high-stakes poker, Curtis
Hanson continues his quest to be the most desultory director in
Hollywood. Eric Bana stars as an emotionally troubled professional
gambler who bumps into his estranged dad (Robert Duvall) at the World
Series of Poker in Las Vegas. Awkward!
Take the Lead
April 7
The still caliente Antonio Banderas stars in this twice-told tale (featured in last year's documentary Mad Hot Ballroom)
about a dancer who teaches ballroom to NYC students. This time around,
the kids have been changed from 11 year olds to teenagers (to up the
sex factor, presumably) and the teacher changed from French to Spanish
(ditto).
Hard Candy
April 14
With a titular euphemism that only a pedophile could love, music
video director David Slade makes his foray into the arena of the
full-length feature, naturally with a thriller about a thirtysomething
trolling for teens on the Internet. Concession stand sales of "Tiny
Tarts" should plummet.
Look Both Ways
April 14
Veteran animator Sarah Watt has been making her hand-painted
shorts for 15 years, but this part-live-action, part-animated dramedy
about love and death in contemporary Australia is her feature debut.
Train crashes, surprise pregnancies, testicular cancer, and man-eating
sharks abound, but none is more traumatic than love.
The Notorious Bettie Page
April 14
Before she was enshrined as a national treasure at Hot Topics
all over this great land, Bettie Page was a scandalous pinup model, the
topic (hot, or otherwise) of this new biopic by director Mary Harron (American Psycho).
Scary Movie 4
April 14
Airplane! and Top Secret! director David Zucker
took over for the Wayans Brothers with the series' third installment
and, for this entry, he reteams with old writing partner Jim Abrahams
for this first time since 1988's The Naked Gun. This horror
spoof also introduces a new comedy team to rival greats like Abbott and
Costello and Martin and Lewis: Dr. Phil and Shaq.
American Dreamz
April 21
Writer-director Paul Weitz follows his underrated corporate culture comedy In Good Company
with an even more ambitious social satire, in which a dim-witted
President of the United States (Dennis Quaid) looks to up his approval
ratings by appearing as a guest judge on the titular (and blatantly American Idol–like) television singing competition.
The Sentinel
April 21
In a movie that was almost certainly pitched as In the Line of Fire meets The Fugitive,
Michael Douglas does his best Clint Eastwood as a loyal Secret Service
agent framed for a crime he didn't commit, while Kiefer Sutherland is
the Tommy Lee Jones forced to track him down when he cheeses it and
goes on the lam.
Wassup Rockers
April 21
Kids, get those fake ID's ready for your local art house: Larry Clark's back. In truth, the word from the Toronto FF (where Rockers
premiered) is that Clark scaled back his characteristically icky
kiddie-porn tendencies and crafted a heartfelt mash note to
iconoclastic South Central Latino teens who skew punk rather than
G-funk.
Art School Confidential
April 28
In this highlight of the spring, Ghost World
collaborators Terry Zwigoff and Daniel Clowes reunite for a hilariously
brutal excoriation of the art world. The standout among the thoroughly
superb ensemble is John Malkovich, who plays a mealymouthed art
professor who's spent decades refining his circular (i.e., he draws
circles) technique.
Clean
April 28
Olivier Assayas's new film finds the Irma Vep director reunited with his ex-wife and Vep
vixen Maggie Cheung in a story of drugs, rock 'n' roll and redemption.
Cheung gives a potent performance as a Courtney Love–like widow
struggling to get clean and a surprisingly not-deranged Nick Nolte
plays her conflicted father-in-law.
Flight 93
April 28
This real-time account of the events on the only plane hijacked
on 9-11 that didn't reach its intended target comes from Brit Paul
Greengrass, who has made several docudramas and one of the smartest
American action films in recent memory, The Bourne Supremacy.
Changing Times
May 5
Resisting the temptation to find the latest nubile French
ingenue, match her with a rakish, undiscovered garçon, strip them down,
and let them frolic among the hyacinths, André Téchiné reunites Gérard
Depardieu and Catherine Deneuve for the seventh time, with Depardieu's
character looking to rekindle a 30-year-old romance with a now married
Deneuve.
Mission: Impossible III
May 5
Is it a new movie or the code name of Tom Cruise's publicists'
attempts to alleviate his dude-is-crazy persona? Probably both, but if
anything can revitalize this stalled franchise it's the writing and
direction of J.J. Abrams, whose Alias is probably the best spy show on television since the original Mission: Impossible.
The Proposition
May 5
Nick Cave and longtime cinematic collaborator John Hillcoat
reunite for this grisly tale of outback outlaws that's straight out of
Cave's Murder Ballads. The full-throated troubadour pens and
scores this sun-soaked horse opera about two barbarous brothers (Guy
Pearce and Danny Huston) pitted against each other in the Australian
badlands by lawman Ray Winstone.
Wah-Wah
May 5
Richard E. Grant, character actor and author of the hilarious memoir With Nails,
makes his debut as writer-director with an autobiographical drama that
deals with divorce, alcoholism, and Swaziland gaining its independence
from England. Could be good, if Grant paid attention while on set with
Scorsese, Coppola, or Altman.
Goal!
May 12
With the fake World Cup a foregone conclusion (Dominican
Republic wins every game in the "World Baseball Classic" by 843 runs,
watch), real sports fans will be hankering for some cinematic
excitement before the real deal in June. The dream of a movie about
soccer better that Stallone's Victory begins here, or maybe with Arsenal striker Thierry Henry's cameo in Spike Lee's Inside Man.
Just My Luck
May 12
After a year that found Lindsay Lohan battling allegations of
drug use and bulimia, the actress selected the role of a woman who
finds her lifelong string of great luck broken after a single kiss.
Wilmer Valderrama, you have a lot to answer for.
Poseidon
May 12
No stranger to boat movies, Wolfgang Petersen floats this remake
of the 1972 disaster "classic" about a capsized cruise ship. Josh Lucas
and Kurt Russell are no Hackman and Borgnine, but the cast does boast
the auspicious return of Richard Dreyfuss.
The Da Vinci Code
May 19
If you need us to tell you what this one is about, you've been
secluded in a cave for the last three years (or you're dead, in which
case, you're not reading this). If you have been living in exile
recently, you're probably also wondering what happened to Tom Hanks's
hair. Your guess is as good as ours.
See No Evil
May 19
Kane is the latest professional wrestler to follow Hulk Hogan and the Rock to Hollywood, in this Saw-ish slasher from the gorehounds at Lions Gate. Keep your fingers crossed for an Undertaker cameo.
X-Men: The Last Stand
May 26
With Bryan Singer, the director of the first two X-stallments, busy with Superman Returns,
this comic book series soldiers on with Brett Ratner at the helm.
Kelsey Grammer joins the cast as Beast, a brilliant and acrobatic
mutant with even worse hair than Halle Berry's Storm.
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