Friday, January 17, 2025

Criterion Channel’s Thrillingly Evolving Roster

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Richard Brody
Staff writer

The Criterion Channel, the foremost moveable source for art-house and repertory cinema, thrillingly expands its offerings each month, and has vigorously embraced a wide range of movies, spotlighting rare independent films and movies from around the world that have recently been restored and reissued. Some of this year’s prime theatrical rediscoveries have already turned up there, including David Schickele’s 1971 docufiction “Bushman,” in which Paul Eyam Nzie Okpokam, a Nigerian student in San Francisco, plays a version of himself (and augments the action with interviews), until his real life is seen to overtake the fiction; and the Mauritanian-born director Med Hondo’s 1979 political fantasy “West Indies: The Fugitive Slaves of Liberty,” which features musical sequences—staged on a set that’s a replicated slave ship—about a popular uprising, in an unnamed Caribbean island nation, against French colonial overlords and corrupt local leaders.

Photograph of Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young.

 Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young in “Man’s Castle.”

Photograph courtesy Criterion Collection

Earlier this year, a MOMA retrospective of the classic-Hollywood auteur Frank Borzage, who reworked Christian themes of redemption through all the genres he touched, presented a long-unseen cut of one of his greatest films, the Depression-centered romance “Man’s Castle,” from 1933. It stars Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young as two unhoused New Yorkers, scuffling to survive, who meet on a park bench and start living together—before marriage—in a shanty town. (Criterion streams the extended cut; the previously available version had been reëdited to comply with the moralistic Hays Code.) Another crucial restoration unveiled recently and on Criterion is “Not a Pretty Picture,” from 1976, one of the most significant of all American independent films, in which the director, Martha Coolidge, a survivor of rape, constructs a dramatization of the crime and the events leading up to it, while depicting herself working with the actors in an attempt to film the experience both truthfully and ethically.

The actress Pascale Ogier is one of the meteoric presences in modern cinema. She died in 1984, on the eve of her twenty-sixth birthday, and one of her most powerful performances is in Jacques Rivette’s “Le Pont du Nord,” from 1981, in which she acts alongside her mother, Bulle Ogier, in a comedic mystery involving corporate espionage and radical politics, government surveillance and the rugged charm of Paris’s decaying industrial zones. It now appears on Criterion, as does a newly programmed batch of Czech New Wave films, including “Case for a Rookie Hangman,” from 1970, Pavel Juráček’s delightfully strange and surrealistic updating of “Gulliver’s Travels,” in which antic absurdities and obscure threats reflect daily life under oppressive conditions.


The New York City skyline

About Town

Dance

Fifty years ago, Arlene Croce, then this magazine’s dance critic, heralded the advent of “the parody company we’ve been needing,” a troupe of men in pointe shoes called Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo. The ensemble, Croce noted, was the creation of ballet fanatics, and its jokes were accurate, affectionate, and hilarious. In the decades since, the group has kept up the gags as its technical acumen has risen and risen. A three-week season at the Joyce, to celebrate the company’s golden anniversary, is heavy on old favorites, such as its classic sendups of “Giselle” and “Swan Lake,” but the first of two programs includes a première by the up-and-coming choreographer Durante Verzola.—Brian Seibert (Joyce Theatre; Dec. 17-Jan. 5.)


Ambient

The multi-instrumentalist Laraaji is among the most significant figures in all of electronic music. A New Age practitioner who found his way to the zither in the nineteen-seventies, Laraaji’s path forward was revealed through kismet: as he was busking in Washington Square Park in 1978, the ambient titan Brian Eno was drawn to his playing, leading Eno to produce Laraaji’s shimmering masterpiece “Ambient 3: Day of Radiance,” from 1980. In the decades since, Laraaji has released dozens of majestic albums, none more divine and blissful than “Vision Songs, Vol. 1.,” from 1984. To celebrate the album’s fortieth anniversary, he brings its restorative sounds to an ideal setting, a Brooklyn Heights church, with accompanying visuals that only amplify an ethereal experience.—Sheldon Pearce (First Unitarian Congregational Society; Dec. 20.)


Art

Cindy Sherman lying in the grass.

Cindy Sherman, Springs, East Hampton, New York, 2024.

Photograph by Annie Leibovitz / Courtesy the artist / Hauser & Wirth

After five decades as the busiest and most versatile of editorial photographers, Annie Leibovitz is still anxious to impress us with her skill and range. Her ambition is a given. “Stream of Consciousness,” a crowded, compressed retrospective of modestly scaled photographs from the past twenty years and a wall of small, push-pinned images, some of which date back much further, includes landscapes (Robert Smithson’s “Spiral Jetty,” Edward Hopper’s childhood home), still-lifes (Lincoln’s top hat, Elvis’s bullet-shattered TV), and interiors (many of artists’ studios). But the majority of the images are engrossing, sensitive, and often startling portraits of famous people, including Joan Didion, Brice Marden, Kara Walker, Salman Rushdie, Billie Eilish, and Cindy Sherman. None of these pictures feel quickly or easily made; most are simply, and not so simply, beautiful.—Vince Aletti (Hauser & Wirth; through Jan. 11.)


Off Broadway



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