DOC COLUMN | Music Documentaries Take Center Stage by Agnes Varnum (March 26, 2008)
A scene from Marin Scorsese's "Shine a Light." Image courtesy of Paramount Vantage.
When the movie started to roll, the image was only a quarter the size of the screen. I’m wondering if I’m in the right place—the IMAX Theater at the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin—just as black and white images of Martin Scorsese begin to flash across the screen. He directed the movie I’m about to watch so I’m convinced I’m in the right spot, but won’t it cover whole screen? Why show it at IMAX? I’m not sure of the exact moment, but suddenly the movie is filling the screen and like a roller coaster ride, we are at the top just waiting for the big drop that is The Rolling Stones as they take the stage of the Beacon Theater in New York City for a legendary performance. The movie is “Shine a Light” and the screening is part of this month’s South by Southwest Film Festival. It is an apropos venue for the North American premiere of one of the newest additions to the concert film pantheon, as SXSW is most certainly a music festival first, with its fantastic but much smaller film festival serving as a pre-party to music. It is brought home in the outtake-like narrative of “Shine a Light” that the audience is watching great showmen at work. Mick Jagger and his fellow band mates have survived decades at the top of music charts because they know how to entertain, and Scorsese knows where to point a camera to keep viewers riveted. Seeing the film in that spot was a heart-stopping, once-in-a-lifetime festival event. But SXSW isn’t a one-hit wonder. There were scads of music docs and docs using music in intriguing ways. “I do believe that our screenings tend to feel like rock concerts sometimes, so it only makes sense that a film on the fun side or the performance side would have a great experience at the festival,” says festival programmer and producer Matt Dentler. “And, as a result, we try to constantly pepper the programming with those kinds of films.” If The Rolling Stones are the pinnacle of rock and roll in our era, for their success, longevity and pervasiveness, perhaps the opposite is Andre Williams. His story is told in “Agile, Mobile, Hostile: A Year With Andre Williams” by Tricia Todd and Eric Matthies. Williams’ brand of sex, drugs and gritty, soulful rock certainly ranks up there with the hardest rollers who somehow manage to live into their 70s, yet he still has to scrape together change to pay his rent at Motel 6.
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AFI Fest
AFI Fest '09
Chipotle Mexican Grill to Award a Filmmaker $2000, April 4, 2010 during the ECOtainment Awards at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills.
THAT FILMMAKER COULD BE YOU! GOING GREEN FILM FESTIVAL'S motto: REthink. REplenish. REcommit. This is the only festival of its kind to focus exclusively on green filmmaking, from production to content! ALL GENRES ARE WELCOME! Prizes include: $2000 from Chipotle, Hybrid Bikes, Tree Planted in Your Name, Fuji Film, Movie Magic Suite Software, Showbiz Software, Super 8 Production Facilities and much more! Hurry and beat the NOVEMBER 30th deadline! www.GoingGreenFilmFestival.com |