The French film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma recently dedicated a special issue to what they described as a
new generation of New York do it yourself filmmakers (N.670), which included Ronald Bronstein (Frownland),
the Safdie brothers, Ramin Bahrani, the guys from Borderline Films, Marie
Losier (The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye), Konstantin Bojanov (Avé),
Alex Ross Perry (The Color Wheel),
and Zbigniew Bzymek. The magazines editor Stéphane Delorme and Nicholas Elliot highlight that even though these films
“don’t resemble one another” that they are all “made in New York and
have a home-made quality to them, as
they are made in their filmmaker's homes, on the streets, with the filmmaker's own money or
that of friends or with the help of the Internet.” The filmmakers all have different interest and come from
different backgrounds and nationalities, which reflects the city’s diversity.
After the great Daddy Longlegs, and alongside their ongoing Red Bucket Films projects and what appears to be a small gallery space the Museum, Josh and Benny Safdie return to filmmaking with the short film The Black Balloon (Spade Films), which is now available to be screened online at the film-viewing and start-up website, Seed & Spark. The Black Balloon is the story of a balloon that wanders around New York that “learns that humans are complicated creatures with extreme highs and lows, but full of life nonetheless.”
One thing that I find to be interesting about this group of young
and up-and-coming filmmakers is that they provide a conceptual model for urban
entrepreneurial filmmaking to happen elsewhere, and there seems to be a new generation of filmmakers emerging
here in Toronto that seems to be following in this path. Who are these new up-and-coming filmmakers in Toronto? There
is Kazik Radwanski (Tower), Antoine
Bourges (East Hastings Pharmacy),
Calvin Thomas and Yonah Lewis (Amy George), Igor Drljaca (Krivina),
Simon Ennis (Lunarcy!), and
Blake Williams (Many a Swan).
They are all young filmmakers whose films reflect something exciting going on in the city and, for the majority of them, have
only completed a few short-films and perhaps one full-length feature.
The two particular films that are under this
Bronstein-Safdie influence are Tower and
Amy George. Just like the
protagonist from the New York films, these two films have a protagonist that wander around
their respective neighborhoods trying to reach out to others to have meaningful
connections but instead those desires always seem to be thwarted. What makes Tower
and Amy George different than the American films is their Canadian spirit
and more precisely a local sensibility. In Tower, Derek is pursuing his animation career, living in his
parent’s basement, working construction, and starting a relationship. While in
Amy George, the teenager Jesse is trying to have a normal life, get along with
his parents, connect with a girl that he likes, and finish a photography
project.
This group of emerging Toronto do it yourself filmmakers are still early on in their careers and
if this early work shows this much promise, who knows what they will eventually
create? Radwanski’s film Tower is scheduled for a February 22nd
theatrical release at the Royal. While the Calvin Thomas and Yonah Lewis new project The
Oxbow Cure is an important film to look
out for in the New Year. Even though the filmmakers in Toronto may look at the
ones in New York as a model, what they are doing is different and speaks more
strongly to a local culture. It is just a matter of time before you hear more
about them…
*****
After the great Daddy Longlegs, and alongside their ongoing Red Bucket Films projects and what appears to be a small gallery space the Museum, Josh and Benny Safdie return to filmmaking with the short film The Black Balloon (Spade Films), which is now available to be screened online at the film-viewing and start-up website, Seed & Spark. The Black Balloon is the story of a balloon that wanders around New York that “learns that humans are complicated creatures with extreme highs and lows, but full of life nonetheless.”
The Black Balloon
begins with a stressful man trying to manage a class of students through the
busy streets of New York, while holding a bouquet of balloons. This is a
similar character to that of Lenny from Daddy Longlegs as in trying to take care of these kids there are
many other things that are distracting him, making the task more difficult. The
bouquet of balloons that he’s holding from theor white strings are impressive: there are red ones, pink ones, white ones, green
ones, blue ones, yellow ones, and purple ones. Together they make a pretty sight. All of the kids, who are being looked after by this single parent supervisor,
stare up towards the balloons in amazement. But as the man is helping the kids
cross the street, he inevitably accidentally lets go of all of the balloons,
and they go flying off into the sky. One balloon flies higher than the rest of them and
this is going to be the one that the story will focus on: the black balloon, of
the film's title.
The Black Balloon is
similar to Donald Barthelme'a short-story The
Balloon (which, on a side-note, was also a big inspiration for David Foster Wallace), of a balloon that unexplainably
starts floating over New York City, but which also represents an extension of
one of its character unease over a partner that he’s missing. If for
Barthelme the balloon is an imaginative object to represent this lost thing
then what does the black balloon represent for the Safdies? The blackness of
the balloon is the same color of a blank, black cinema screen. The balloon is
going to join people in moments of crisis and create empathy for their plight.
This is like cinema itself. The black balloon represents something that watches
people in time of need as well as something that comforts, encourages and
helps. It is this use of the balloon as a metaphor for the potential of cinema
that makes The Black Balloon so beautiful and complex.
The black balloon gets stuck in a tree and then gets picked
up and thrown into a garbage truck, which brings it to a garbage dump. The
balloon makes its escape from there and floats back, through snow, to return to
Manhattan. There it wades through the busy, crowded street until you hear,
“Ratso, keep your chin up!” This guy, who turns out to be a big schleppy
long-haired man who speaks in a strong Jewish accent and is wearing a bright
yellow jacket, turns out to be a television producer who has been recently
fired for making an inappropriate joke about the American President, and is waiting
for an old colleague who he chats with during her lunch-break as she gets a hot
dog from a street vendor, and who he is trying to get to let him back into the
company’s office. She says no, and then the balloon joins him. It’s strange how the
balloon starts following him, and at first he’s in shock (“Where are the
cameras?!”), but eventually they start to get along. Ratso, to no one’s
surprise, is a hustler and uses his new friend to steal a dress from a
high-scale fashion boutique to use as a gift to re-friend his colleague. When
he gives it to her, she notices that it’s stolen and refuses it and walks away.
And so does the balloon.
It worth commenting upon the episodic nature of The Black
Balloon and how in between each encounter
the balloon is free-floating around and engaging with the locals. The music in
the film is by Gong and the synthesizers with their futuristic sounds give these temps
mort scenes a dreamy quality. The next stop for the balloon is in a
park to watch-over a little girl. At first the little girl is upset because her
mother is not paying attention to her but instead to the new man in her life.
The mother is always sending the little girl away, either to look at or get
something, while she uses the opportunity to kiss the man that she’s now with.
There is a Sofia Coppola quality to these scenes in capturing of the young
girl’s boredom and frustration. The girl plays with the balloon for a while and
it circles around her, but she tries to pop it with a stick, and that is when
it narrowly escapes.
The next stop for the black balloon is with a poor
middle-eastern man who uses the balloon as an excuse to visit his son and show
it to him. Except that his son, Moustafa, is busy at work and it turns out that
the man only went to hit him up for free food. He then asks the balloon to go
and to leave him alone. The balloon drifts throughout the night and the
following day the balloon returns to a NYC Balloon truck and decides to rescue
all of the other balloons that are stuck in there. The black balloon hits the
back window of the truck several times so that it shatters and all of
the other balloons that are in it escape and fly out and are free. This is
where the films open aired cinematography by Sean Price Williams can be really
appreaciated as the colorful dots dance around the blue sky. And with this
beautiful conclusion The Black Balloon
is a great addition to the balloon film genre alongside Albert
Lamorisse’s Le ballon rouge (1956), Hou
Hsiao-hsien’s Flight of the Red Balloon (2007) and Peter Docter’s Up (2009).
Very good article, well done. I'm a DIY Toronto filmmaker myself putting the finishing touches on my first film now so it was nice to read about other young filmmakers in the city doing the same thing, I'll definatly be checking out their work thanks to this article. If you like, check out my preview on youtube, search Hayter Street preview and I hope you enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteI'll definitively check it out. Good luck with everything, Andrew!
ReplyDeleteThank you and ill hollar when the films done
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