AYT #33: The Weakest Summer In The World?

This week, we start with a review of the bootlegging action drama Lawless and then move in to a look back at this past summer movie season, assessing the disappointments, pleasant surprises and our acting MVP. In our last segment, we run through three awesome retrospective screenings happening at The Hollywood Theatre and two at The Laurelhurst Theater.

New episodes of Adjust Your Tracking are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. We’re on iTunes now, so make sure to subscribe to the show by clicking the link below. Also, leaving reviews and rating the show on iTunes is really helpful in getting more attention and attracting more listeners, so please do so if you like what we do. You can also stream the episode on the embedded player below.

WARNING: Explicit language is used in this podcast.


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AYT #32: Adapt Or Die

This week, we’ve got several reviews and segments for you, dear listener. Erik kicks things off with a recommendation of the excellent new documentary The Imposter, which opens at Cinema 21 this weekend. We then get excited about the chance to see The Road Warrior at the Hollywood Theatre this weekend. From there, it’s on to the meat of the show as we discuss two new releases that are both adaptations, one from a play (Killer Joe) and the other from a book (Cosmopolis). Things end on a somber note as we look back at the career of director Tony Scott, who recently committed suicide.

New episodes of Adjust Your Tracking are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. We’re on iTunes now, so make sure to subscribe to the show by clicking the link below. Also, leaving reviews and rating the show on iTunes is really helpful in getting more attention and attracting more listeners, so please do so if you like what we do. You can also stream the episode on the embedded player below.

WARNING: Explicit language is used in this podcast.


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AYT #31: It’s Ok To Scare Kids

This week, inspired by the great new stop motion animated release Paranorman, we delve in to a list of kids or family films that are frightening, demented and often just plain old messed up. We then end things with another edition of Love it/Hate it.

New episodes of Adjust Your Tracking are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. We’re on iTunes now, so make sure to subscribe to the show by clicking the link below. Also, leaving reviews and rating the show on iTunes is really helpful in getting more attention and attracting more listeners, so please do so if you like what we do. You can also stream the episode on the embedded player below.

WARNING: Explicit language is used in this podcast.


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Top Down presents Peter Jackson’s Dead Alive (aka Braindead)

This review is republished from Nick Bruno’s blog, The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

Long before Peter Jackson’s involvement in all things Tolkien made him a household name along the lines of Lucas or Spielberg, the man cut his teeth practicing the art of b-grade horror and cult cinema.  Early salvos such as Bad Taste and the uniquely wicked Meet the Feebles might have prepared the few that saw them for Dead Alive (released as Braindead in Jackson’s homeland of New Zealand), but let’s be honest here, most fans in the U.S. were directed to the early works after seeing Dead Alive for the first time.

What to say of Dead Alive twenty years after its release?  Time has shown it to be among the very best of a particularly humorous breed of splattercore cinema, the equal of (or possibly even better than) Sam Raimi’s 1987 classic Evil Dead II and far above other pretenders to the throne such as Cemetary Man or even (and I know I’m gonna get some flack for this) the quite excellent Re-Animator.

The film has plenty of guffaw-inducing moments on hand, from the crazy monkey-rat creature to the famous use of a lawnmower as a weapon, but it’s also among the bloodiest of horror films.  Jackson gleefully doles out the gore like someone who just got a deep discount at the fake blood shop, enough so that it still retains the power to shock the uninitiated even as it simultaneously inspires convulsive laughter.  Oddly, the newly released, meta-rom-com Ruby Sparks (from the directors of Little Miss Sunshine) features a few choice moments from Dead Alive and, sure enough, the audience for that film recoiled when those bloody images filled the screen.

Combining the supernatural, a love story, and one hell of a Freudian obstacle (you thought Norman Bates’ mother was overbearing) to its protagonist’s happiness, Dead Alive has it all.  And whether you’ve heard it once or a thousand times, “I kick ass for the lord,” remains one of cinema’s funniest battle cries.  Dead Alive is a film that deserves to be seen again and again.  Don’t miss the chance to see it with a packed audience at Top Down.

The NW Film Center’s Top Down Rooftop Cinema series presents Dead Alive (aka Braindead) on Thursday, August 16th at 8pm.  More info available here.

Global Lens Tonight ~ THE FINGER

 

In 1983, after seven years under the Argentine Dictatorship, democracy blossoms in an out-of-the-way village when the birth of its 501st inhabitant results in official “town” status and the first mayoral election. Based on real events, director Teubal’s charming dramatic comedy pokes fun at small town ways while celebrating the birth of true democratic values.

 

“A gentle political satire…both an engaging, often amusing portrait of a community on the cusp of change and an attack on human credulity.” — Variety.

 

Showtimes and Tickets here

 

AUGUST 14, TUE 7PM

Fat, Bald, Short Man: Looking Outside the Safety of Routine

This review is republished from Nick Bruno’s blog, The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

Carlos Osuna’s Fat, Bald, Short Man occupies a rare space in animated, feature-length cinema.  Much like similarly-pitched works such as Mary and Max, Persepolis, and Fantastic Planet, it’s a cartoon with adults in mind, one that seeks to grab viewers with an emotional maturity beyond what is normally forwarded within the medium.  But what distinguishes the film from those mentioned above is how easily its screenplay could have been filmed using live actors, such is the quiet, observational quality of the writing and the reality explored within the piece.  Basically, Osuna’s made an animated film steeped in the cinema of the social outcast, somewhere along the lines of Punch Drunk Love or James Mangold’s excellent 1995 film Heavy.

The story here revolves around Antonio Farfan (Álvaro Bayona), a lonely, middle-aged man working in a notary’s office.  He lives by himself, has little connection with his co-workers, and only hears from his verbally-abusive brother when he wants to borrow money.  Out of the blue, there’s a regime change at his workplace.  The new boss, who bears a strong resemblance to Antonio, befriends him.  At the same time, Antonio comes to the aid of an elderly neighbor in need.  These changes, along with being talked into joining a small group for shy folks at a local self-help center, slowly begin opening him up to new avenues of being.

Fat, Bald, Short Man is a film that understands that the safety of routine is often what keeps us from moving forward.  Antonio’s plight isn’t so much that he is incapable of living a full life; it’s that he believes himself to be no more than what he is in the present, cringing against the possibility of rejection to the point of rejecting possibilities.  What we have here is a simple and universal tale rendered in a medium most often associated with telling fart jokes to kids (see most modern Disney works for further reference).  Hopefully, audiences will be able to look past their preconceptions about what animated features can be and end up embracing it for the nuanced and mature work that it is.

Highly recommended.

Fat, Bald, Short Man screens at the NW Film Center’s Whitsell Auditorium (in the Portland Art Museum) on Wednesday, August 15th at 7pm.  More info available here.

AYT #30: Our Story Of Film

This week, with the Film Center showing the massive essay documentary for the next few weeks called The Story of Film, we delve in to our own personal story of film, discussing how we came to be cinephiles, directors that opened our eyes to other films, and certain films which we do and do not agree with their status as classics. We also wrap this chat around the recently released Sight and Sound poll of the greatest films ever made. The show ends with another edition of Laptop Cinema.

New episodes of Adjust Your Tracking are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. We’re on iTunes now, so make sure to subscribe to the show by clicking the link below. Also, leaving reviews and rating the show on iTunes is really helpful in getting more attention and attracting more listeners, so please do so if you like what we do. You can also stream the episode on the embedded player below.

WARNING: Explicit language is used in this podcast.


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ADJUST YOUR TRACKING – THE PODCAST

You’ve heard about it or you’ve heard others talking about it! The podcast Adjust your Tracking produced through the NWFC Newsroom is hosted by the incredibly charming Erik McClanahan and Joe von Appen and it comes out on Thursdays. See it here or on iTunes. Below, we’ve got a few Podcast trailers to show you what we’re (and everyone else) is talking about.

 

* warning: some explicit language

 

SURRENDER

[Read more...]

Featured Feature: Certificate Grad Jared Liebenau Presents New Film


Jared Liebenau
, an independent filmmaker and School of Film Certificate Graduate based in Eugene, Oregon, gives a teaser to his mysterious independent film at the August MOPAN meeting. The Children of Terra Firma, written, casted, and directed by Liebenau, embodies the perplexing disappearances of first a family in 1982, then a heavy metal band in 1992, and finally a duo of documentary filmmakers in 2002 –a decade later all is revealed when a paranormal reality show host finds the truth. Liebenau will be answering questions about the production of his sci-fi feature and filming process and sharing a few clips August 9.

Liebenau graduated from the School of Film’s Certificate Program in 2010 and has had his films recognized in various festivals such as the Artists’ Television Access in San Francisco (CA), Olympia Film & Music Festival (WA), and Noise! Festival (Vancouver BC). Liebenau will be hosting a full screening of the Children of Terra Firma this September.

We wish Jared all the best in his future in film. Well done!

 

 

If you’re a School of Film student with a story to share, let us know! We want to write about it.

AYT #29: We Can Remake It For You Wholesale

This week we basically rip apart the new remake of Total Recall, and because the film is so lackluster Joe and Erik end up talking more about the original, which holds up quite well. We then get in to another discussion on remakes, because if they’ll never stop being made we’ll never stop talking about them.

New episodes of Adjust Your Tracking are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. We’re on iTunes now, so make sure to subscribe to the show by clicking the link below. Also, leaving reviews and rating the show on iTunes is really helpful in getting more attention and attracting more listeners, so please do so if you like what we do. You can also stream the episode on the embedded player below.

WARNING: Explicit language is used in this podcast.


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