Wednesday, February 6, 2008

The Memories of Leopold Bray

This black and white homage to the European New Wave has no dialogue but features an extensive voiceover throughout and a piercing violin soundtrack. The film documents one summer in the life of an enigmatic young boy (the eponymous Leopold): his mysterious and uneventful forest journeys, his ambivalent relationship with a teenage crush; his frustrating encounters with the pedestrian citizens of his small town. This is the only completed film by writer-director Simon Sollis, who manages to transform the Pacific Northwest from a place of contemplative beauty in one scene to a Baroque nightmare in the next. Sollis used a number of child actors to portray Leopold as filming took more than three years. Leopold Bray entered the festival circuit in 1981. Sollis continued to write rambunctious essays about film (never collected) through the late 1980s. He worked briefly as an English Professor at Chemeketa Community College in Salem, Oregon.

Monday, February 4, 2008

The Changing Room


1952 Science Fiction flop in which Lauren Bacall portrays shape-shifter Janie Flint, who leaves her house in a new body every day. (Bacall always shifts into women, usually more decadent and flattering than the last.) Bacall is hunted by future Oscar winner Tom Tully, who portrays a tough employed by a cabal of misunderstood government scientists whose experiments presumably caused Bacall's never-fully-explained powers. The bewildering flick spends 72 minutes desperately trying to graft a condemnation of McCarthyism to its imbecilic plot -- rumors persist that the studio savagely edited the film into this declawed B-movie with A-list talent but an original screenplay does not exist. A bomb at the height of Bacall's fame, The Changing Room hasn't been shown in theaters for more than 55 years.