Sunday, March 11, 2012

Performance Notes, BAM, Batsheva Dance, Hora, and some Bodies


Batsheva Dance Company presents Hora at BAM:

I know nothing about modern dance, a fact which I tried to keep in my mind as I watched, because I think it's important. The most depressing thing I hear, often, in the workshops we've been hosting, is "I don't know enough about poetry to try to understand it" — when that feeling of not knowing, at least in the beginning, is an important one, and if you relegate everything not-know-yet into the category of other people's problems, that's when you fall for charlatans and academics. Why not be in the not knowing, ask why one doesn't know and what one doesn't know and what, if you knew, would make a difference to you in the watching.

The first thing I thought was that anything in time is a narrative. And if there is no narrative then we make a narrative. And so narrative exists, but why, and where? The dancers, eleven, five male, six female, began in almost frightening unison (given how un-alike their bodies are: this is not a group chosen for uniformity, some are tall, some are small, they wear variations of black). But the unison quickly broke into a single dancer moving about the stage, utterly free, unnaturally free, not given to easily understood movements, intensely playful. More dancers joined him until everyone was moving with a sort of chaotic grace either entirely improvised or fantastically difficult. There was no differentiation in form or gender. It was just bodies, selves.

But as the hora progressed recognizable things began to emerge, cued by recognizable music — first a silly synth version of the star wars theme, which emerged in the dancers not quite as a joke but almost as a reaction to something that might be a joke. Many more recognizable songs followed, usually from movies, and what it felt like most was a reaction, not to the music itself, or to the movies alluded to ("Ride of the Valkyries," "Thus Spake Zarathustra," etc): but a reaction to the memories, in the audience, raised by this music and these movies. As these progressed the dances became more recognizable the dancers themselves became more recognizable, as male and female, then as pairs (one lone female sitting out). As the dance became easier to watch, the bodies themselves became less interesting. It ended with one dancer, almost lost, lingering as the others returned to their spots along the wall, unsure of where or who she was.

It was the jokes that were heartbreaking, I never thought to laugh.

The second thing I thought was dance is the body. There are two things to do with the body in performance (that is, as an object and a tool). One can infantilize it and one can sexualize it. On one side the circus, on the other the bordello. On one side, "Look what I can do," on the other "Look what I could" do. Both are promises without fulfillment — more obviously in the case of the sexualized body, but also in the infantile: the promise is that what is being performed is difficult, what is not fulfilled is seeing it fail.

The infantile and the sexual are both tied to play, they are both aspects of play, but what I'd say is the difference is the intention: the sexualized body is a doing. The infantilized body is a becoming. The sexualized body moves downward, toward the earth, onto the body of the watcher. It yearns to catch and fall. The infantilized body moves upwards, it yearns to evade. It cannot even be pursued. Its direction is at right angles to desire.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Academy Awards 2012 Nom-Noms, Movies about Movies about Acting in Movies



You might have noticed I haven't been posting much here, mostly because my reviews of terrible movies have been picked up by JustPressPlay. But it's that time of year again to talk about the movies that are supposed to be not-terrible, but usually are. That's right, it's The Oscars: Not Accounting for Taste since 1929.



Last year's awards were a potpourri with the gentle scent of Mediocre Medley. This year seems to be no different.

Best Picture
The Descendants might be the only movie for adults on this list, in that it's concerned with taking apart illusions rather than building them up. Midnight in Paris was a cute ball of childish fluff, and I'm just not sure how it's any different from the last ten years of (roughly equivalent) Woody Allen films that it suddenly deserves an Oscar nod. (Match Point was the best thing he's done since the 90s, and that only got a writing nod.)

Speaking of pervy old men, look at Speilberg with War Horse and Scorsese with Hugo. Neither of them have made a truly great movie in forever. Is the Academy so desperate for role models that it needs to trot out a gray-haired American auteur or two for every ceremony? True, the red carpet wouldn't quite be the same without Scorsese's eyebrows bobbing somewhere along it, wafting up and down lazily and independently, like drinky birds.

Also note the absence of an Eastwood this year, both he and DiCaprio have been snubbed for J. Edgar. This might be the first awards in a while where we're spared having to watch Leo fail to win anything.



Best Actor
Gary Oldman is a bit of a surprise here, since Tinker, Tailor skated by theaters without too much notice like a cold war spy. On skates. But Oldman's nomination is curious since in Tinker, Tailor he basically plays Alec Guinness. Now look at Brad Pit playing Robert Redford in Moneyball, Dujardin playing any number of silent actors in The Artist, and George Clooney playing, well, George Clooney. All of these characters are throwbacks. Are movies becoming increasingly about movies? I predict that in a decade the only award-winning acting will be Marlon Brando impersonations.

A notable snub this year is Michael Fassbender, for his poignant and full-frontal portrayal of guilt and sex addiction in X-Men: First Class.

Of course, Pitt deserves an Oscar nod for trying his hardest not to be sexy (a great, ultimately futile effort). And Clooney deserves an Oscar nod for his salt-and-pepper hair. Or, rather, his hair deserves its own category. Best George Clooney hair in a George Clooney movie (Comedy or Musical).



Best Actress
Most of the buzz here is going to Michelle Williams in My Week with Marilyn for the much-covetted "Playing Someone Who Couldn't Act" award. Viola Davis needs a separate "Putting Up with White Folk" award. The statuette will be of Nichelle Nichols.



Supporting Actor/Actress
And the Oscar goes to: Jonah Hill! Did you just die a little inside right there?

Writing
Usually my favorite category, this year is basically a mess. "Original Screenplay" has two foreign films, two comedies, and one Sorkin-esque docudramady ("Best Fast Talking about Important Matters in a Non-Sorkin Film, Or, the In The Loop Award"). Adapted writing has one novel (The Descendants, one sort-of-novel (The Invention of Hugo Cabret), one play (The Ides of March), one non-fiction (Moneyball), and one movie/novel (Tinker, Tailor).

My Predictions:
are that it will be a five-hour waste of time but I'm going to watch it anyway. Also Billy Crystal will make one dirty joke too many and end up with more than he bargained for when Viola Davis takes him home.

As usual I'll be watching as many of these films again or for the first time over the next month. I'll be writing quick reviews here on the fly about how terrible they all are and how the apocalypse must surely be coming. Can't tell you how much I'm looking forward to it.