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A Hard Day's Night
Cinema 21,
616 NW 21st Ave., 223-4515. 7 pm
Friday-Thursday, Jan. 5-11. $6.
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REVIEW
A FAB-ULOUS SOUND TO BEHOLD
The restoration of
A Hard Day's Night launches the Northwest Film Center's
18th Reel Music Series.
by
BRIAN LIBBY
243-2122 ext. 355
Reel Music Series: Jan. 7-Feb. 10. Call the Northwest Film Center (221-1156)
for details.
Thirty-six years ago, the Beatles took time out from invading America to reinvent
the rock 'n' roll movie as we knew it. Before 1964's A Hard Day's Night--the
restoration of which kicks off this year's Reel Music series--films about pop
stars lacked the very nerve and verve that made their music fun. As the Fab
Four conquered the charts and approached their first movie deal, they swore
they wouldn't make the same mistake. When the lads saw Richard Lester's experimental
Running, Jumping and Standing Still Film, they knew they'd found someone
to help map a new path into the music industry's movieland.
In the lexicon of gifted filmmakers, Richard Lester does not rank high. Try
watching How I Won the War or Superman III. But Lester's marriage
of vintage slapstick comedy with an avant-garde visual style--jump cuts, hand-held
cameras, lightning-quick pacing--made the Beatles' first celluloid venture as
fresh as their imprint on vinyl. A Hard Day's Night doesn't bother inventing
trite melodrama (á la Elvis) to prop its stars' singing. Instead, Lester
and screenwriter Alun Owen use a mock documentary--24 hours in the life of the
band--to give rabid Beatle fans the cheeky rebellion they want to see and the
songs they want to hear. And why not? I dare you to try erasing that title track
or its accompanying screaming-girls chase scene from your gray matter after
just a few bars.
Watchable as A Hard Day's Night remains, however, there has always been
one unmatched rival to Lester's onscreen Beatlemania: the Beatles themselves.
Throughout this brisk hour and some, John, Paul, George and Ringo seem madcap
as Marx Brothers with mop-tops--charismatic boys next door with bravado. But
if you've seen their press conference outside JFK Airport after touching down
for the Ed Sullivan Show (or any number of other appearances behind the
mic), you know the lads can be more witty and surreal left to their own voices.
A Hard Day's Night's pioneering mix of reality and fiction is
seen across the board today in movies, television and literature. The Beatles
aren't presented as they actually were, but Lester's radiant, effortless sleight
of hand continues to inspire.
For those of you who get enough of the Beatles from commercial jingles and
VH1 profiles, this year's Reel Music series also offers a variety of other eagerly
anticipated and undiscovered gems. Known for her riveting blue-collar portrait
Harlan County, USA, documentarian Barbara Kopple returns with My Generation,
which examines the Woodstock festivals of 1969, '94 and '99 to draw conclusions
about the generations who made pilgrimages to upstate New York. Los Angeles
film collector Mark Cantor will present Giants of Jazz, another evening
of rare jazz performances on film, including such icons as Charlie Parker, Louis
Armstrong and Charles Mingus, as well as under-appreciated masters like Rahsaan
Roland Kirk. On Jan. 12 in the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Film Harmonic
will premiere four short films from Portland filmmakers--Chel White, Gus Van
Sant, Joan Gratz and Jim Blashfield--set to a live Oregon Symphony performance.
There are myriad other tantalizing offerings during the month, such as the
Portland premiere of Alan Zweig's Vinyl, an amateurish but ultimately
smart documentary about obsessive LP collectors made by one of their own. Whether
you prefer films about sainted chart toppers or blundering bottomfeeders, passion
and obsession for the song is consistent throughout Reel Music 18.
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