Materialists (2025)
Directed by Celine Song
Cinematography by Shabier Kirchner
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Materialists (2025)
Directed by Celine Song
Cinematography by Shabier Kirchner
Past Lives (2023), dir. Celine Song
Happiness
1998
May December (dir. Todd Haynes) x WFF 2023.
There's a deeply sincere quality to the dryly comical knowingness of May December's detached psychological humour. Scripted by screenwriter Samy Burch, the self-conscious film revels in its cattiness. It's often truly uncomfortable how the various characters toy and play with each other's emotions as Brazillian composer Marcelo Zarvos' delightfully overwrought musical score dials up the sense of high tension. It's an intoxicating ride questioning emotionally predatory behaviour at every turn.
Killer Films.
First Reformed (2018).
“Colette” - Em Análise
Entre 1900 e 1904 foram publicados uma série de livros que que descreviam o crescimento de uma jovem rapariga e as suas aventuras. Provocadora, lasciva e contra imensos tabus e imposições associadas ao sexo feminino, a série ‘Claudine’ veio agitar as ruas de Paris e inspirar milhares de jovens mulheres a assumirem a sua importância, sexualidade e uma nova estética. Infelizmente, durante muitos anos, apenas um nome era associado às aventuras da jovem Claudine, o de Willy (pseudónimo de Henry Gauthier-Villars) – marido da criadora e principal autora destes diários, Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, sobre quem este filme se foca.
Wash Westmoreland (realizador) e Richard Glatzer adaptam, com contributo de Rebecca Lenkiewicz, uma peça de teatro (da autoria dos dois primeiros), que explora a vida e legado de Gabrielle Colette. Focando-se nos seus primeiros anos como autora (acrescente-se também mimo, dançarina e atriz) este drama de época cai naquilo que seria expectável ver neste género, mas nem por isso menos prazeroso.
Colette (Keira Knightley) desde cedo revela-se como uma mulher amante da natureza, do campo e das coisas simples. Contudo, rapidamente entra em ‘colisão’ com o mundo pretensioso e superficial das elites artísticas e ‘avant-garde’ da paris na viragem do século XIX para o XX – o mundo do seu marido Henry (Dominic West). Não demora muito até Colette se observar como um peão numa relação que só serve um sentido: o de satisfazer os anseios autorais de um homem demasiado preguiçoso para criar algo verdadeiramente novo.
Mas Colette não é uma mulher qualquer e com o seu espírito indomável usa isso a seu favor para colocar em Claudine os seus pensamentos, desejos, estética e ideologia. A Marquesa de Belbeuf (Denise Gough) tem, por isso, um papel extremamente importante no mundo criativo de Colette, como uma mulher que claramente lutava pela igualdade das mulheres na sociedade francesa (e pelo direito a amar quem o coração ordena, independentemente do género) ao assumir a estética masculina e não se deixar domar pelos homens.
Da honestidade às relações de poder num casamento e do abuso e apropriação de qualidades artísticas, as linhas entre a ficção e a realidade cruzam-se no relacionamento tóxico e fervoroso vivido por Colette e Henry. ‘Colette’ presenteia o espectador com uma estética equilibrada, uma banda sonora que serve os propósitos dramáticos da narrativa, décors (exteriores, interiores, artificias e naturais) muito ricos e detalhados, com figurinos muito bem conseguidos.
Mas o que talvez se destaca mais é a ideia que nos é transmitida através da protagonista, Colette (uma interpretação fantástica e elegante de Knightley), cuja força dos seus atos e legado ressoa (um século depois) a importância ainda atual da luta pela igualdade de direitos e género: alguém que tem uma voz e que quer dar uma voz às mulheres que viveram “abafadas” numa sociedade patriarcal e tóxica. Afinal, a desculpa do «sou homem e é o que os homens fazem» já está mais do que usada e é tempo de mudar.
Classificação: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Rui Ferreira
New this week, director Todd Haynes: “Now we have a much more competitive landscape, where a lot more is possible. So, I think where creative vitality can exist, that’s all really good. I'm a lover of cinema, and I don’t want that to completely expire.”
Personality Crisis: The Radical Fluidity of Todd Haynes’ ‘Velvet Goldmine’ by Judy Berman
[This month, Musings pays homage to Produced and Abandoned: The Best Films You’ve Never Seen, a review anthology from the National Society of Film Critics that championed studio orphans from the ‘70s and ‘80s. In the days before the Internet, young cinephiles like myself relied on reference books and anthologies to lead us to film we might not have discovered otherwise. Released in 1990, Produced and Abandoned was a foundational piece of work, introducing me to such wonders as Cutter’s Way, Lost in America, High Tide, Choose Me, Housekeeping, and Fat City. (You can find the full list of entries here.) Over the next four weeks, Musings will offer its own selection of tarnished gems, in the hope they’ll get a second look. Or, more likely, a first. —Scott Tobias, editor.]
Like the glam rockers it gazes upon through the smoke-clouded lens of memory, Velvet Goldmine is most beautiful when it descends into chaos.
Stolen, the way great artists do, from Citizen Kane, the skeleton of Todd Haynes’ 1998 film is a chain of interlocking reminiscences of Brian Slade (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), a David Bowie-like glam rocker who fakes his own onstage death in the mid-’70s. A decade later—in that most dystopic of years, 1984—his ex-wife Mandy (Toni Collette) and former manager Cecil (Michael Feast) relate their bitter tales of betrayal to a journalist (Christian Bale) whose assignment has him reluctantly reliving his own teenage sexual awakening under the influence of Brian’s music. Between the interviews, musical numbers, and onscreen epigrams, there’s also a mysterious female narrator who sometimes surfaces, like a teacher reading a subversive storybook, with dreamy exposition that reaches back a century to invoke glam’s patron saint, Oscar Wilde.
The film climaxes with a propulsive sequence of scenes that are exhilarating precisely because they merge all of these points of view, subjective and omniscient, into one collective fantasy. Brian and his new conquest, the Iggy Pop/Lou Reed composite Curt Wild (Ewan McGregor), ride mini spaceships at a carnival to Reed’s “Satellite of Love.” Two random schoolgirls, their faces obscured, act out a love scene between a Curt doll and a Brian doll. In a posh hotel lobby, Brian’s entourage, styled like Old Hollywood starlets on the Weimar Germany set of a fin-de-siècle period film, recites pilfered sound bites about art. Then Brian and Curt are kissing on a circus stage, surrounded by old men in suits. They play Brian Eno’s “Baby’s on Fire” as Haynes cuts between the performance, an orgy in their hotel suite, and Bale’s hapless, young Arthur Stuart masturbating over a newspaper photo of Brian fellating Curt’s guitar. Stripped of narration—not to mention narrative—the film seems to be running on its own amorous fumes, its story fragmenting into a heap of glittering images as it hurtles from set piece to set piece.
Visual pleasure aside, it’s a perfect way of translating into cinematic language the argument that underlies Haynes’ script—that glam’s revelations about the radical fluidity of human identity go far beyond sex and gender. As the apotheosis of teen pop audiences’ thirst for outsize personae, fictional characters like Ziggy Stardust (who Velvet Goldmine further fictionalizes as Slade’s alter ego, Maxwell Demon) melded the symbiotic identities of artist and fan into a single, tantalizing vision of hedonism and transgression. Kids imitated idols they didn’t quite recognize as pure manifestations of their own inchoate desires. Musician and fan became each other’s mirror, and both could become entirely new people simply by changing costumes or names.
But it’s pretty much impossible to imagine Velvet Goldmine’s distributor and co-producer, Harvey Weinstein, appreciating this as he watched the film for the first time—or seeing anything in it, really, besides an expensive mess.
Haynes and his loyal producing partner, Killer Films head Christine Vachon, had already been through hell with Velvet Goldmine by the time they delivered a cut to Miramax. Bowie had refused Haynes’ repeated requests for permission to use six Ziggy-era songs in the film, claiming that he had a glam movie of his own in the works. And in a production diary that appears in her book Shooting to Kill, Vachon points out one unique challenge of making a film about queer male sexuality: “The MPAA seems to have a number of double standards. Naked females get R ratings, but pickle shots tend to get NC-17s. Our Miramax contract obligates us to an R.” She also mentions that an investor pulled $1 million of funding just weeks before filming.
The shoot was even more harrowing than the two veteran indie filmmakers could’ve predicted. As they fell behind schedule, a production executive started nagging Vachon to make cuts. “Todd is miserable,” she wrote in her diary the night before they wrapped. “He says that making movies this way is awful and he doesn’t want to do it.” In an interview that accompanies the published screenplay for Velvet Goldmine, Oren Moverman asks Haynes, “Was the making of the film joyful for you?” “I’m afraid not,” he replies. “We were trying very hard to cut scenes while shooting, knowing that we were behind and we didn’t have the money for the overloaded schedule. But there was hardly a scene we could cut without losing essential narrative information.” It’s remarkable that he managed to capture 123 usable minutes’ worth of meticulously art-directed ‘70s excess (and ‘80s bleakness) in just nine weeks, under so much external pressure, on a budget of $7 million.