Max Goldberg

Eternal return

Three evenings of Gregory Markopoulos' visionary early films at the Pacific Film Archive

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Zero for conduct

YEAR IN FILM: Contemplating the filmmaker as teacher

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arts@sfbg.com

YEAR IN FILM American cinema lost several of its troubadours this past year: genuine independents like Robert Breer, Owen Land, Adolfas Mekas, Richard Leacock, Jordan Belson, and George Kuchar. Critical appraisal of these sui generis filmmakers tends to rest upon masterpieces and technique, but several were also influential as teachers.Read more »

Let's get lost

Skateboarding doc Dragonslayer coasts to a pretty picture of wasted youth

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FILM Dragonslayer tags along with Josh "Skreech" Sandoval, a Fullerton, Calif. skater celebrated for shredding pools and living a vagabond's life. First-time director Tristan Patterson fronts with the kind of side-winding portraiture that prizes sensory impressions instead of back-story, but whittle away Dragonslayer's loose ends and you end up with an unremarkable lost generation romance, a Bonnie and Clyde with lower stakes. Read more »

GOLDIES 2011: Paul Clipson

A keen appreciation for the interrelation between fine-grained detail and expansive volumes

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GOLDIES Whether we're talking about his verging live projections or crystalline short films, Paul Clipson makes things happen onscreen. His exploratory form of lyricism is composed for Super 8 film. That for is critical, since Clipson shoots with a well-practiced intuition for what shows up as gold in Super 8 (an increasingly rare form of presentiment). While taking great advantage of the small-gauge camera's pencil-like responsiveness to movement, Clipson works from a keen appreciation for the interrelation between fine-grained detail and expansive volumes. Read more »

Frame missing

The unorthodox visions of "Not Necessarily Noir"

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arts@sfbg.com

FILM Of all Elliot Lavine's noir programs for the Roxie, "Not Necessarily Noir" is both the toughest sell and the most creative from a curatorial perspective. There are two programs in this abbreviated "Not Necessarily Noir" run that should have built-in audiences — a slam dunk Joan Crawford double bill of Johnny Guitar (1954) and Female on the Beach (1955), and a full course of Ed Wood — but the terrifically nervous movies at the start of the series do the most to stake out its intuitive terrain.Read more »

French twists

French Cinema Now scores with standout works by reliable auteurs

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Light years

Paying tribute to Jordan Belson's cosmic cinema
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Difficult loves

In praise of Raúl Ruiz's elaborate Mysteries of Lisbon

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Vive Vigo

A new DVD set celebrates Jean Vigo's evergreen films

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Green dreams

Two documentaries on the lives of garbage pickers

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arts@sfbg.com

FILM Has the landfill, junkyard, and lowly dumpster supplanted the factory as a site of documentary interest and even inspiration? Yerba Buena Center for the Arts features two 2010 docs this week to add to the growing list of recent films centering on scavenging, gleaning, dumpster diving, trash humping, and scrapping — activities illustrating resourcefulness in the shadow of colossal waste.Read more »