Popcorn & Candy: Hell Hath No Fury...
DCist's highly subjective and hardly comprehensive guide to the most interesting movies playing around town in the coming week.
Jezebel and Hallelujah
Welcome to January, when most theaters are treading water, keeping their rosters pretty constant to give you the best chance you can of winning your office Oscar pool. Even the AFI is taking a break from its usual heavy rotation of special events and retrospectives and is showing pretty much the same three movies for the next three weeks. With that in mind, and since we've already told you what we think of most of the end-of-the year releases, we'll concentrate on museum and one-of-a-kind screenings this week. Starting with the Postal Museum. They don't show movies that often, but how many movies apart from Charade can you think of that have a direct philately tie-in? All the more surprising then that they've got a double-feature on tap this weekend, but before all the stamp collectors in the audience get too excited, both are films that have been recently commemorated in stamps, rather than movies about daredevil adventures involving the recovery of rare and valuable postage. Now that we mention it, that's not a bad idea for the next Indiana Jones sequel; couldn't be any worse than the last one, at any rate.
First up on the Postal Museum's double bill is Jezebel, William Wyler's pre-Gone With the Wind, antebellum drama about a southern belle (Bette Davis) with the temerity to wear a red dress to a ball where all the single girls are expected to wear white. If that's not enough to give the other ladies a case of the vapors, she does it to humiliate a man (Henry Fonda) who had the nerve to refuse to go shopping with her. Davis won her second and final Academy Award for the role (though she'd go on to be nominated eight more times), in a film that is somewhat more obscure than it might have been, had a more epic treatment of a strong-willed woman not overshadowed it the following year. This is followed by Hallelujah, a musical about the tumultuous life of a southern sharecropper, notable for being one of the first Hollywood films with an entirely African-American cast. Hollywood legend King Vidor directed, and it was a first for him as well, being his first sound film; he had more than just an artistic stake in the outcome, as MGM forced him to put his salary back into the picture's production, just in case the "risky" film failed.
View the trailer for Jezebel.
Saturday afternoon at the National Postal Museum. Jezebel begins at 1 p.m., Hallelujah at 3 p.m. Free.
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Imaginary Witness: Hollywood and the Holocaust
In a year that saw two major motion pictures associated with the Holocaust, both of which were accused of cheapening their subject with cheap melodrama, it's a more than fitting time for a screening of Danny Anker's little-seen documentary about how Hollywood has treated the tragedy over the years. Anker traces the relationship between Hollywood and Germany back to the very beginning of Hitler's rise, when Germany and the movie industry had a nice little business relationship going that may have influenced the media to soft-pedal the threat posed by the Third Reich, and follows it on through to more recent years, when the detailing of the horrors has become more graphic. But even the most celebrated films about the Holocaust have not been without controversy or detractors, and Anker addresses the complex and difficult debates over how the Holocaust has been portrayed on film. Anker has taken some criticism himself for not opening up his own movie beyond the scope of Hollywood, and missing a more worldwide context. But since it's considered tacky to raise any arguments against a film with Holocaust themes, as if it's virtue enough to be tackling the material at all, it's nice to know someone wants to get people talking.
Sunday morning at 10:30 at the Avalon. Director (and Potomac, MD native) Danny Anker will lead a discussion after the film. $12.
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Banana Skin
The Freer Gallery is kicking off it's 13th Annual Iranian Film Festival this weekend, which will feature a total of six films over the next couple of months. First up is a ghostly comedy about a humorless overachiever who dies and finally finds out how to enjoy life, only it's in the afterlife. While it sounds like the premise for a really bad Hollywood farce, director Ali Atshani's film seems to have picked up quite a few fans in the small number of festivals it's found its way into so far. Enjoy the laughs while you can, as this is a light start to a festival that in the coming weeks will feature a string of far heavier fare, films dealing with marital woes, heroin addiction, and the deep religious and social divides within Iran.
Friday at 7 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Freer Gallery's Meyer Auditorium.
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Films of Teuvo Tulio
In the National Gallery's introduction to the work of Finnish director Teuvo Tulio, they talk of his "wildly melodramatic narratives" loaded with "exaggerated metaphor and feeling." Those are phrases that could also be used to describe the work of the once derided, now celebrated director Douglas Sirk, whose penchant for gaudy and ironic melodramas flew over the heads of contemporary critics, but saw a revival after later reevaluation, and the praise of directors from Fassbinder to Todd Haynes to John Waters. Considering Sirk's Scandinavian roots and the fact that Tulio was making his best known films at the beginning of Sirk's career, it's not hard to imagine that maybe the Finn had some influence on Sirk's own style. Perhaps it's time for a Sirkian renaissance for Tulio as well? OK, the likelihood of a surge of interest in a small group of films made in Finland in the 30s and 40s is probably unlikely, which is all the more reason to head over to the National Gallery to check out the three titles (Cross of Love, The Way You Wanted Me, and In the Field of Dreams) the museum is showing this weekend. All three feature lush depictions of the Finnish countryside as the backdrop for love stories overwrought with larger than life emotions.
This weekend at the National Gallery of Art. See their schedule for showtimes. Free.
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Speaking of larger than life emotions, nothing beats the silent era for completely over the top theatrics. Films on the Hill usually presents at least one silent film a month in their series, and this month it's The Goose Woman, a 1925 film about an opera singer who is cast out of the business after giving birth to a child out of wedlock. We can understand (if not forgive) her for being rather cold to her son as he grows up, what with her going from international star to tender of geese. But when she accidentally frames him for a murder, will it turn out that she really loves him after all?
Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, presented by Films on the Hill. $5.
