Latest Articles

The 100 Greatest Movie Insults (NSFW and, oh well, predominantly American)

Posted by Erwin Romulo at July 1st, 2010

Hey Quentin Tarantino, I noticed something

Posted by Jayvee at May 10th, 2010

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How to be Paul Schrader 

Posted by Jayvee at May 4th, 2010

By Paul Schrader as told to Philbert Dy, originally printed in the December ’09 issue of UNO Magazine.

START WITH YOUR PROBLEMS 

Films are just metaphors for personal problems. Start with something you’re having trouble with, and then find a metaphor that helps describe it. 

HIT ROCK BOTTOM

I started out as a critic, but non-fiction wasn’t doing it for me. At the time, I fell out with (film critic and Schrader’s mentor) Pauline [Kael], I owed money to the AFI, my marriage had fallen apart, and I was basically just drifting around LA, watching a lot of pornography. I was living in my car, and that’s around the time that I came up with the metaphor of the taxi driver, stuck in this metal coffin in the city. That’s where Taxi Driver came from. I was Travis Bickle. 

DON’T SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF

I needed a city that was run by cabs. I’d never been to New York, so I got the streets all wrong. I had 6th Avenue running the wrong way. But it didn’t matter. The story was what mattered. 

DO IT YOURSELF

With Blue Collar, this young writer was talking to me about car plants, and I came up with the idea of this story about the workers at those plants, with a racial angle. I offered it to him and he wasn’t interested, so I came home and told my brother that I had given this writer a great idea, and he’d turned it down. And I thought, we should do it ourselves. I’m very interested in characters who act against their best interests; characters who can’t see what’s good for them. 

SURVIVE

(On Blue Collar, which became legendary for its cast fighting through the entire production) Richard Pryor was the unhappiest man I’ve ever known. But I guess that’s typical of comics. He’d have these wild mood swings. He’d go from extremely nice to extremely nasty in a moment. I knew that if directing was going to be like this every time, I wouldn’t be doing it much. Sometimes I think I didn’t direct that movie. I survived it. 

FINDING A COLLABORATOR

(On Martin Scorsese, who Schrader worked with on four films) We’re alike in many ways. We’re both asthmatic film buffs. And we’re intellectuals. He grew up in an urban Catholic environment though, while I had a more rural upbringing, so there’s just enough difference to make it work. 

STAND YOUR GROUND

(On Hardcore) I made that movie because I wanted to write about my father. I didn’t like that film very much. I didn’t like how it turned out. The studio made me change the ending, and I don’t like that ending. They made me recast the girl, and I don’t like that actress very much. I should have stood my ground on those things. I made a movie about my father and a movie about my mother and I screwed them both up. What does that tell you? 

DEALING WITH DEATH THREATS

The first few days in the production of Mishima, we were receiving a lot of death threats. There were these people on the far right who didn’t like the idea of an American telling the story of their hero. There still are. The people who financed the film had to negotiate with the people on the far right, and the compromise was that instead of shutting down production, they’d block the screening in Japan instead. It still hasn’t been shown in Japan. There was talk of that a couple of years ago, but it still hasn’t happened. 

Normally you assume that if you die during production, they could get someone else to finish the movie. Not with Mishima. I was thinking that if I die, the film would never get made. It’s too complex. It’s a lot to hold in your head. 

HOW TO DIRECT ACTORS

Directing actors is 75% casting. You catch the right actor at the right time in the right place at their life, and you don’t have to do much else. I think that as a director, my job is to just give a couple of hints.

ON FAILURE

Why dwell on that? The truth is I’ve been lucky. [My films] have their followers, and few films can find that level of success. I love film. I love working.  

Sometimes you just know that you got it. Like in Affliction. I really think that’s a perfect little film. I got that story. Or it could be a performance. Or sometimes it’s just a shot. The best moments are whenever anything feels good. I focus on that.

WRITING MOVIES IN THE MODERN AGE

They don’t make movies like the ones I used to make. Nowadays, I start with where the money is. Independent filmmakers are like scavenger dogs. I hear that there’s money in India, and I think “well I’ve got an idea for that.” But after that, it’s mostly the same. You find something you care about, and you put it up on screen.

Relax See A Movie at Mogwai: Aug. 31-Sep. 5

Posted by Erwin Romulo at August 30th, 2009

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AUGUST 31 – MONDAY
9 PM – Were the World Mine
Directed by Tom Gustafson
Written by Tom Gustafson and Cory James Krueckeberg
Timothy, a young gay high school student who feels like an outsider in his community, finds a recipe for the love potion used in William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Timothy decides to use the potion to turn his entire town gay, turning his world into a musical fantasyland of his own devising. Were the World Mine is an exuberant musical film that also ends up being pretty poignant.

grace

SEPTEMBER 1 – TUESDAY
9 PM – Grace
Written and Directed by Paul Solet
Madeleine Matheson (Jordan Ladd) gets into a car accident that leaves her husband and the baby inside her womb dead. Traumatized, she is unwilling to accept the death of her unborn child, and insists on carrying it to term. Much to everyone’s surprise, the baby miraculously returns to life in Madeleine’s arms after a bloody delivery. But the baby has a thirst for blood, and Madeleine, unwilling to see her only child go hungry, will do anything to keep her fed. What sounds like the premise for a cheesy horror movie is actually a pretty disturbing yet strangely affecting drama about the role of a mother, and the lengths a mother might take to protect her child.

soloist-the

SEPTEMBER 2 – WEDNESDAY
9 PM – The Soloist
Directed by Joe Wright
Written by Susannah Grant
Based on the book by Steve Lopez
During a major case of writer’s block, L.A. Times columnist Steve Lopez (played by Robert Downey Jr.) befriends Nathaniel Ayers (Jamie Foxx), an incredibly talented mentally ill homeless street musician. Inspired by his story, Lopez sets out to try and help Ayers and others like him, but he finds that reality can be a tough foe to deal with.

taking-chance

SEPTEMBER 3 – THURSDAY
9 PM – Taking Chance
Directed by Ross Katz
Written by Ross Katz and Michael Strobl
Based on the true story of Lt. Col. Michael Strobl (played by Kevin Bacon). Frustrated with his superiors’ disregard for his recommendations pertaining to the Iraq war, Strobl volunteered for military escort duty, and accompanied the remains of Pfc. Chance Phelps, a marine who died at the age of 19, from Dover to the Phelps family home in Wyoming. Taking Chance looks at a much-ignored aspect of the war; that of the bodies coming home, and everything that follows.

little-ashes

SEPTEMBER 5 – SATURDAY
9 PM – Little Ashes
Directed by Paul Morrisson
Written by Philippa Goslet
It is 1922 in Madrid. A young Salvador Dali (Robert Pattinson) enters university of dreams of becoming a great artist. There, he makes friends with Federico Garcia Lorca and Luis Buñuel, and for a while, the three of them become the prime movers of Madrid’s rising modern art movement. But Dali finds himself unsatisfied with his current relationship with Lorca, and risks their friendship and reputation as he attempts to cross boundaries. And their ensuing closeness destroys as much as it nurtures.

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Mogwai is a haven for those who crave a taste of something different,a great hangout with a rural heart in the bosom of the urban metro. In both its menu and ambience, it’s a melting pot of Filipino tastes,serving up the best of the traditional and the eclectic, the familiarand the new.

A café and restaurant, Mogwai serves the best home-style cooking in a setting as homely as a rustic watering hole. With a menu especially prepared for the no-frills but discerning diner, it also offers a good selection of native coffees and drinks for those who enjoy a hearty discussion after their meals.

On the second floor, Mogwai has a cinema room dedicated to showing all sorts of films from Hollywood classics to underground cinema,art-house fare to Pinoy grindhouse flicks. Run by practicing filmmakers and film scholars as consultants, it is the only other cinema aside from the U.P. Film Center and Cultural Center of the Philippines to have no censorship restrictions in the country. With its excellent audio-visual facilities, it will have a minimum of 9 screenings, 6 films a week and will consistently premiere the best indie short films and features. Workshops and discussions with top directors, cinematographers, writers and other technicians will be held regularly both for the budding filmmaker and cineastes (Discounted workshops rates for members.)

Unit 62 & 63 Cubao Expo, Gen. Romulo Ave., Cubao mogwaifilmclub@gmail.com Open from 6pm-2am (adjustments may be made for private functions and special events)