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NYFF: Alejandro Jodorowsky speaks and screens EL TOPO! Plus reviews of THE HOST and THE ABANDONED!!

Published at:  Oct 13, 2006 8:17:19 PM CDT

Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with a great wrap-up from the NYFF which has a rare appearance by cult legend Alejandro Jodorowsky talking about his work and the work of others. You'll also find reviews for the great creature feature THE HOST and Nacho Cerda's THE ABANDONED! Enjoy!!!



NYFF...

Alejandro Jodorowsky, the greatest living filmmaker, graced New York City for the first screenings of his masterpieces “El Topo” and “The Holy Mountain” since the 1970’s. Neither film has achieved distribution in America due to a longstanding feud between Jodo and rights-holder Allen Klein, but that is due to end soon, as ABCKO Films has been restoring the legendary pictures for a proper DVD release. While there is regret that neither screening offered a fresh print of the films, we were getting a peek at the new ABCKO transfers, and boy, are they gorgeous. There were still discoloration issues and a few overtly digital enhancements, though all parties claimed the transfers were still a work in progress. Whatever the case, the American cinematic public will be truly blessed the day both films attain distribution.

Widely regarded as the first ever midnight movie, “El Topo”, Jodorowsky’s second recorded film (before “Fando Y Lis”, Jodorowsky claims he directed a mime film called “The Transposed Heads” that was lost forever) is perhaps the strangest, most unforgettable western of all time. Jodo stars as an invincible gunfighter who travels the west on horseback with his unclothed, primitive son. When he comes across a dilapidated monastery, he decides to leave the son behind in favor of a shapely female companion, who in turn demands he become the greatest gunfighter in the desert. In order to achieve this, he finds himself coming after the four contenders to that throne. However, he loses his humanity in the process, and when his companion falls for another woman, he is killed in an act of selfish sexual rebellion.

Underground, he is reborn, cared for by a collection of the physically disabled and disregarded. They have been shut out of a lawless western town because of their deformities, though El Topo’s newfound pacifism helps bridge a gap between the two worlds as a vaudevillian performer. But what of this young, black-clad stranger who has arrived at this godless town of prostitution and slavery at the same time?

To boil “El Topo” down to a mere description, synopsis or review is folly, but if this reminds any of you of the trials of Jesus, you’re on the right track. Like most Hispanic filmmakers, Jodorowsky is particularly fascinated with Christianity, though his target seems to frequently be the malleability and hypocrisy of its practitioners. El Topo is incensed that the villagers worship false gods, equating belief to a strong hand in Russian Roulette, while black slaves are treated like sexual conquests before hangings.

One of the items forgotten from the first time I saw “El Topo”, on a beaten down VHS dubbed in English but with Korean subtitles, was how strong the music was, and here, that comes through in full detail. The colors are vibrant, too- Jodorowsky’s imagery is second to none, and the beauty in violence is explored through his work through the most gorgeous colors one can imagine. However, certainly, Jodo is not PETA’s favorite filmmaker- after the fifth or sixth simulated rabbit death, a man behind me complained loudly and stormed off in a huff.

After the screening, the sprightly, joyous seventy-eight year old Jodo did a lengthy Q&A. Highlights:

-He absolutely LOVES Guillermo Del Toro, because he is fat, and also because of his movies. He also considers himself a Paul Verhoven lover, and he adores “Starship Troopers”.

-He doubts his ability today to film his script for “Son Of El Topo” because there are no investors eager to work with him, though he admitted the rapturous response during the Q&A had him excited. Actors willing to be in the film include Santiago Seguro, Nick Nolte, Alfonso Arau and Marilyn Manson.

-He marveled about the ability for older men of every type to find love and lamented the end of his previous relationship with a woman who wanted a child. He is currently dating a Vietnamese girl thirty-seven years younger than him.

-Marilyn Manson became a huge fan of his overnight, suddenly recommending “The Holy Mountain” to everyone, particularly fans through his websites, giving Jodo a new fanbase. Manson also wanted to be married off by Jodo, but only if he had the white jumpsuit he wore in “The Holy Mountain”. He didn’t, but a tailor made a remarkable replica.

-He has since made peace with Allen Klein, as they both remarked about how old and beautiful they both were. Jodo also made sure to go into detail on how Klein’s client at the time, John Lennon, was instrumental towards bringing “El Topo” to the masses. In the audience, Sean Lennon nodded approvingly.

-Both “El Topo” and “The Holy Mountain” will be getting brief theatrical runs before showing up on DVD, possibly in NYC at the IFC Center.

-Jodorowsky didn’t do a Q&A for “The Holy Mountain” as it was a Saturday midnight screening, though he did openly admit he never tried drugs before or during “El Topo” but was introduced to LSD through initiation for “The Holy Mountain”. He spoke about his desire to work with a guru for the film, and then spent a week sleepless, enduring the effects of the drugs.

And it shows. “The Holy Mountain” is a fever dream, more elaborate, terrifying, funny and expansive than “El Topo” in every way. Much like Jodo’s previous films, “The Holy Mountain” isn’t at all married to narrative, beginning with the persecution and mistreatment of a would-be savior, crucified with flowers before eventually being used for a mold of his body and being forced to carry a cross with his armless, legless friend. This Jesus-figure yearns for something else, in the form of the Alchemist, a white-suited guru who recruits him with champions from each planet in order to participate in a soul-cleansing pilgrimage to the summit of the Holy Mountain, where enlightenment lies.

There are sights in “The Holy Mountain” that you can’t un-see. Jodorowsky creates intricate set-pieces the way fat people stack pancakes- each scene can be taken on its own as the most audacious moment in the entirety of seventies cinema. Revolutions spawn blood made of bluebirds, men bathe in the mist of their melted feces and in the end man must face the ultimate illusion of the film form. It’s heady stuff, enhanced by Jodorowsky’s calming, mesmerizing performance as the Alchemist, a role originally intended for John Lennon.

I returned to the New York Film Festival on Monday and faced one of two options. I could have gotten up early and hoped for a rush ticket to David Lynch’s supposedly impenetrable “Inland Empire” or I could have come in during lunchtime for Joon-ho Bong’s Korean monster movie “The Host”. Upon hearing “Inland Empire” was three hours long, I opted for “The Host” and ended up with a genre classic. “The Host” has been purchased for an American release in January (and, in theory, an eventual American remake), and I urge you to do everything in your power to see it when it is released. If marketed right, this thing can make a billion dollars, Korean subtitles be damned.

“The Host” begins with a flashback to an American army base in Korea six years ago. An American scientist chides a Korean lab technician for lack of cleanliness and demands he empty out toxic chemicals into the river. When the underling protests, the American makes it a military order, therefore setting the stage for the rest of the film’s straight-faced insanity. Not only are we dealing with a classic science-gone-bad creation, but we also have the inferiority complex of Korea in relation to America established in harsh tones. We quickly end up in modern day, where an idle-minded goof-off working at a food stand with his father and daughter discovers a massive, people-eating beast emerging from the river and galloping on its hind legs, destroying local camp grounds. The beast eventually grabs the daughter and ventures out into the water, leading the family (including a brother-sister combo of an unemployed college graduate and an archery wiz) on a quest to recover the girl.

However, in addition to the monster, the family also has to fight government burecratic red tape, with the government acting quickly in the wake of the beast’s attack to quarantine attack victims and pronounce the beast’s presence as unleashing a flesh-eating virus onto the unsuspecting public. It soon becomes clear that the Korean government is taking its cues from America in order to preserve order, a task that involves higher-ups making some devastating decisions.

Without being gory or disgusting, “The Host” features a number of startling sequences involving the hideous creature, rendered through flawless computer effects from the guys at WETA. It’s a marvel of a creation, causing massive amounts of mayhem that you instantly believe even if you’ve become accustomed to picking out CGI. But there’s also a lot of comedy, mostly disseminating from the family at the film’s core. They mock and degrade each other and yet that affection never vanishes as they find themselves becoming closer during a terrible tragedy. Odd to say, but this is the movie “Little Miss Sunshine” should have been.

Afterwards, a miscalculation led to my having to run from 66th Street to 11th and 3rd Avenue for the second feature, an advance screening of the first full-length film from Nacho Cerda, “The Abandoned”. While I haven’t seen Cerda’s previous work, the supposedly gruesome short films “Genesis” and “Aftermath”, I had heard that they were extremely involving and difficult to watch. An extra draw was the presence of one of the movie’s three co-writers, one Richard Stanley. Stanley’s been gone for awhile, doing a couple of documentaries that show up on the new five disc set for the cult classic “Dust Devil”, but it was awesome seeing his name on the big screen again for a horror film.

Oddly enough, while it’s true that many horror films have female protagonists, it’s especially unusual when, at the film’s start, they are forty years old, and especially odd that they are never at any point sexualized. The forty year old in question is Marie, a single mother of German descent now living in California. She has opted to finally retrace her roots, hoping to learn the truth behind what we see in a pre-credits sequence, when a woman’s truck abruptly stops at a tiny cabin in Russia, leaving her dead in front of two crying babies.

Once she hooks up with a foreboding travel guide who has summoned her with new information regarding the location of the cabin, she heads into the dark forest with a monosyllabic guide. Naturally, they get separated and she ends up alone in the cabin. It’s not a stretch to say the cabin is haunted, but by what? She finds a man there, Nicolai, who claims to be her brother and also wants to learn the truth about their parents. Nicolai should come across as a helpful, friendly guy, but he’s played by Karel Roden. You may remember Roden from “Hellboy”, or any other of a succession of bad guys- here he’s playing a regular guy, but guess what? Still creepy.

The movie has some heady ideas and a fairly downbeat, pessimistic view of one’s curiosity towards their origins. The Russian backwoods are a dark, depressing place, and the setting isn’t something that’s really gonna bring in the big audiences. And that confused me- who is the movie for? There’s a lot of complex ideas being thrown around that I have to confess I didn’t entirely get the first time around, including (zombie) dopplegangers, the despair of being a middle-aged woman and even time travel (!). At the same time, a few moments are genuinely scary, and it’s safe to say, you’ll jump in your seat more than a few times. Cerda really knows his way around horror imagery. Still, the movie was surprisingly not that gory, leaving one to wonder how this movie would fare compared to stuff like “Saw”. If anything, it’s like a mixture of “The Shining” and “The Grudge”, with the unsatisfying elements magnified- confusing structure, loose, undercooked ideas, an unusual setting and a difficult, remote cast.

I got to be a part of a focus group after the movie, and most were generally positive about the experience. However, the consensus was as far as a horror movie it may have been too much of a thinker, and the audience greeted it with the expected amount of hostility. It’s certainly a curiosity what could be trimmed, as it was a fairly short movie, though one hopes they don’t take it down to PG-13 level, because the genuine scares in this film are certain to haunt audiences for quite awhile.

Anyway, I'm Fabfunk. Rock and roll.



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    Readers Talkback

  • Oct 13, 2006 9:01:52 PM CDT

    Thanks a lot...

    by mantenna

    You just completeley ruined El Topo for me. I was about to see that film next week and now I read everything about it n one single sentence.
    Put a damn Spoiler-Warning on the article, Quint!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 13, 2006 10:18:04 PM CDT

    you PASSED UP a LYNCH film?!?

    by cenobite

    well, I guess the good Jodorowsky write up saved your soul. LONG LIVE THE METABARONS!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 13, 2006 11:04:34 PM CDT

    El Topo overhyped, Holy Mountain underhyped

    by readingwriter

    El Topo just seems so trite to me--too self-consciously weird, like he kept thinking "Wow, look how weird I'm being!" while Holy Mountain had the strangeness burned into it. There is no way it could have built to a satisfying climax, but I have to admit that the cliched one it has SPOILER shouldn't work, but it just does. Whenever characters suddenly break the fourth wall it speaks of that self-consciousness of course, but it just felt right in this context. END SPOILER The dude is certainly baroque enough, but his movies only work on the visual level for me, like Sante Sangre. It's like watching Quay Brothers stuff, not like experiencing a real film.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 12:43:37 AM CDT

    I love Holy Mountain

    by vern

    I mean I love El Topo too, but Holy Mountain - the first time I saw that I thought HOLY SHIT how is it that this movie really exists and is not one of the most famous movies ever made? There is nothing like it. It seems like it was beamed in from another planet. I want to see that shit sitting on the shelves at Best Buy. The day that happens the whole world will probaly melt or something.
    I really wish he would make Sons of El Topo because years ago I was able to read the script and it was fucking GREAT. It was translated from french to English, and you would think that a Jodorowsky movie wouldn't work on paper anyway, but it was actually very suspenseful and exciting. I'm sure the script has evolved since then but at the time it was about El Topo's two sons, Cain and Abel, carrying the sainted body of their dead mother to bury on an island with their father, while every bandit in the land follows the perfume scent of her flesh trying to steal it to use to get onto the island and steal El Topo's treasure. Also I believe volcanoes were involved.
    So, no mention of the gangster movie he was supposedly doing? Does that mean he's not really filming?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 3:00:38 AM CDT

    This movie is for a 20something with pressed sneakers..

    by sleesl

    who spends around 4 hours a day in chat rooms, 6 at an IT career, 6 recreationally and kills himself every evening with a cartoon knife. WTF!!! Why does everything now have to be quantised and "designed" measured and facilitated for a particular 'type' of person. "who is this movie for?" FABFUNK is an alter-idiot with a penile entractment,..his spending habits on narcotic cellulite and jujube cleats lead our marketing analysts to believe with all their might in a two year old city wide daughter, namely: my own....and her name is : ME! If you wouldn't mind going to hell soon, why....we'd be most tridently pleased.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 7:19:15 AM CDT

    Ruven

    by mantenna

    If it's so moronic to ask for a spoiler mark, why do all the other articles and reviews that spoil big chunks of plot and story have them?
    And since when do you skip reviews, if you're planning to see a movie. I COME HERE to read about the movies I'm about to watch, because I want to be informed without being spoiled.
    Tis is aintitcoolnews, you stupid tit.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 7:58:32 AM CDT

    what about Santa Sangre???

    by gangar

    Always talk about El Topo, but what about Jodo's epic horror flick? One of the coolest, craziest movies ever made. I sure wish someone would restore that and give it a proper release!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 9:12:59 AM CDT

    Don't sweat it, Mantenna

    by vern

    First of all bud, El Topo is 36 years old, so different standards of spoilerism apply than if it was some movie that comes out Friday. I think it's reasonable to assume that you haven't seen it by now you need to be talked into it. But second of all, I can understand why you would think that what he wrote there "spoiled" the movie, but trust me. We're not talking The Usual Suspects here. It's true that it would be real hard to spoil El Topo, although it is more from this planet than Holy Mountain. Having that brief plot summary (which actually skips over the main part of the movie) is like having a plot summary before an opera or something, it might even help you. I checked and he did not give away the one thing that he arguably shouldn't give away (that at the end he comes out wi-- just kidding, I'm not gonna say it). So don't worry about it. If you were interested then go see it.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 9:22:06 AM CDT

    santa sangre is available

    by davidlynch4eva

    I've seen it on dvd. You might even be able to netflix it. I got
    fando & lis from netflix. Its a really great movie as well. Much more mime influenced than his other stuff. Much less occultish. Also I should point out to the reviewer that those aren't simulated rabbit death scenes they are very real. Jodorowsky slaughtered hundreds of bunnies himself for the film. He feels real blood is necessary for a film. He also says you cannot make a magickal film without violence. Anyway the guy who walked out during the rabbit death scenes probably walked out because he knew
    it was real. Or maybe not. I do know that kenneth anger has a problem with jodorowskys films do to the animal violence. Though the tour are friends personally. So yeah there's a spiel and look for Santa Sangre on DVD.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 12:11:50 PM CDT

    Agreed, Vern...

    by mantenna

    Although we have different opininions about the 'standards of spoilerism' (great word, by way ;), I appreciate your answer. Of course i'm gonna see the film. You actually got me even more excited about. Thanks

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 12:29:18 PM CDT

    santa sangre

    by reckni

    don't think i was ever the same after watching that. i'd pillaged pretty much the entire captain video store in berkeley, dude there recommended it for me. blew me away. good to hear it's FINALLY on dvd, i'm snapping up a copy pronto.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 1:47:29 PM CDT

    chicky

    by mantenna

    I already did.
    Unfortunately I don't speak your language... What's with the numbers?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 1:59:07 PM CDT

    Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on SuicideGirls

    by skippy75

    Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on SuicideGirls

    http://suicidegirls.com/interviews/Alejandro%20Jodorowsky/

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 2:00:41 PM CDT

    Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on SuicideGirls

    by skippy75

    Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on SuicideGirls

    [URL=http://suicidegirls.com/interviews/Alejandro%20Jodorowsky/]Alejandro Jodorowsky interview on SuicideGirls[/URL]

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 3:11:34 PM CDT

    El Topo is really cool

    by modlight

    weird, but cool, I would love to see a decent print or DVD of it.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 6:49:15 PM CDT

    Holy Mountain batman!

    by mr. brownstone

    Holy Mountain is incredible. I saw a screening of it in 35mm back in the mid 90's and it has been burned into my brain ever since. I actually consider it so special, that I have vowed to only ever see it again if screened on film. It needs to bee seen bigger than life while sitting on velvet with your feet sticking to the floor.

    El Topo, oddly enough, I can't stand. Found it to be mind numbingly repetitive and way too long.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 14, 2006 9:23:17 PM CDT

    Santa Sangre not in region 1 NTSC

    by vern

    Fando + Lis is the only one ever legitimately released on DVD for the US. You can get all of the others (except maybe Tusk) imported from other countries, but most of them are of questionable origin and none of them are up to normal DVD standards of remastering. But it sounds like that will be changing soon, which is nice. Until then I will continue enjoying my crappy Italian import of Holy Mountain.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 15, 2006 1:35:59 AM CDT

    Jodo made one of the funnier comments from a director

    by readingwriter

    ...when he said he considered his version of Dune HAD, in fact, been made, because he'd imagined it and worked it all out in his head. I think in the end the planet Dune expands and gobbles up the universe or something. His version would have been a lot freakier than the one considered by the producer of Planet of the Apes, for sure.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 15, 2006 3:31:34 PM CDT

    God be praised!

    by acroyear77

    Now let's work on Santa Sangre getting the proper DVD treatment.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 15, 2006 8:47:16 PM CDT

    I Love The Holy Mountain!

    by justinsane

    Well, most of it. It's incredibly brilliant up until the last half hour, then falls apart for me. I love Santa Sangre and have a love-hate with El Topo, and still haven't seen Fando y Lis. I still hope Jodo's DUNE can be made featuring an animatronic Dali. Do it!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oct 16, 2006 5:41:00 PM CDT

    not since the 70's

    by dubthach

    actually jodo came to olympia washington for the olyfilm festival in the mid nineties - 95 or 96, to show all three of his masterworks. if i am not mistaken, that year, also saw kenneth anger show his works, including the original print of 'lucifer rising' with the jagger soundtrack. what a film festival that was!

    Reply to Talkback

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