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Pamela Biery

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Pamela Biery

Category Archives: Film Reviews

Exploring the Legacy of Manzanar: From Film to Play to Book

13 Monday May 2024

Posted by Pamela Biery in Book Reviews, Film Reviews, Nevada City, Uncategorized

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Tags

annkaneko, CATS, manzanar, onyxtheatre

Review by Pamela Biery

When Jeannie Wood, CATS (Community Asian Theatre of the Sierra)  Executive Director, saw the documentary film “Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust”, she knew it was a perfect partner for CATS production of “Snow Falling on Cedars” at the Nevada Theatre.

Seeing both the” Snow Falling on Cedars” production, which is being performed through May 18, and “Manzanar, Diverted”, screening on May 26, offers a complementary and multidimensional perspective on several critical aspects of American history. Like bookends, we see the beginning exodus of tribes, incarceration, and where we are now with Manzanar in the Owens Valley.

The Play: Snow Falling on Cedars

The CATS production of Snow Falling on Cedars at the Nevada Theatre is playing through May 18, 2024.  This play is based on David Gutuerson’s best-selling novel, adapted and dirested by Kevin McKeon. McKeon previously directed here in 2010, at which time it won many accolades. He returned to Nevada City from Seattle to mount this performance. Clever and simple staging makes this story work. Local actors provide strong character representation as the story moves along a Post WWII reckoning of race, war wounds and a divided society in need of healing.

The Film: Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust

Documentary filmmaker Ann Kaneko’s connection to Manzanar is multi-generational. It is a place that family members just described as she was growing up in Los Angeles. Returning to Manzanar, she comes to understand the tribes that were removed from this land before the Japanese were turned here during World War II. Behind the story, moving the puppets across the high Sierra desert, is the Los Angeles power and water district. This thoughtful film shows a history as well as protections being put in place for future conservation.

The Book: Buddha in the Attic

Lastly, for those wanting to dig a little deeper and do some further learning through reading, take a look at Julie Otsuka’s book, “Buddha in the Attic.” This national bestseller and winner of the Pen/Faulkner Book Award provides a consciousness flow of Japanese women immigrants to San Francisco in the 1800’s through their Americanization and then, with the onset of the war, on to Manzanar. Rather than the usual storyline, the author gives us a raft of individual examples that taken together present a picture that is more complete than what we may have gotten from a traditional storyline.

Know & Go

Get tickets to “Snow Falling on Cedars” through May 18 at NevadaTheatre.com.

Tickets online and available at the door to “Manzanar, Diverted: When Water Becomes Dust” screening on May 26 at 7 PM The Onyx Downtown at the Nevada Theatre 401 Broad Street, Nevada City. Tickets at theonyxtheatre.com. The filmmaker will provide a virtual Q&A immediately filling this film. This screening is a community fundraiser for CATS, as is the play.

“Buddha in the Attic” by Julie Otsuka is available at local booksellers and on Amazon.

Note: This is an independent review.

Constellations 

17 Friday Feb 2023

Posted by Pamela Biery in Film Reviews, literature, poetry & poets, Uncategorized

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Tags

Academy Awards, arthouse, film, Merwin, Poetry, Rilke

Notes on Film

A favorite poem by Rainier Maria Rilke

In 1977 I had friends that lived on Green Street In San Francisco. The way I remember it, I had stayed over for a few days, and then, as I was leaving, the wife of this couple pressed a hand-written poem into my hand and somehow, this has stayed with me through the years…perhaps because it is such a small scrap of paper or perhaps because it found a home in a handmade placeholder. Anyway, today, here it is, reminding me how the world seemed so large then, yet now I see it was really much smaller, simpler, and humane. 

I have always seen this poem as being about choices—the choice to adorn and admire appearances or to reach deeper for the real flavor of life. In this sense, it’s like looking at a still-life with a bowl of waxed fruit contrasting with wandering in an organic orchard and reaching up and picking the sunset-colored peach and letting the warm juice drip down your chin. In short, surface versus depth. 

This thinking is a part of how I consider the film. There are many stories out there that are all surface, some quite good. Other stories reach for depth and maybe even hint at metaphors that may or may not be discovered. This year, “The Menu” is a rare film that manages both in my view. 

One of my favorite examples of a film going beyond the surface is the wonderful 2002 indie film “Made Up” Tony Shalhoub produced with his wife Brooke Adams and Susan Sarandon’s daughter, Eva Amurri. This film is a mix of relationship resolutions between mother and daughter, aging, and perceptions of beauty. It was such a joy to see the fun the actors were having and the fun they were poking at a society adapted to illusion, made up, and also made up with cosmetics. My guess is that the audience for this film was in the thousands, not millions. There is art for the masses and there is art for specific audiences, like indie film lovers who show up at places like the Mill Valley Film Festival, Nevada City Film Festival, or art houses across the country. 

With the Academy Awards coming up, it is nice to note a few unconventional films in the mix with blockbusters and action flicks. Specifically “Everything Everywhere” and “The Banshees of Inisherin” have gotten well-deserved attention in spite of their disregard for formula and shiny, predictable surfaces. 

Not on anyone’s award radar in particular is a film I found wondrous, in part because I had read the short story that it was based on and found the use of film to tell it as a sort of visual miracle. George Miller’s “Three Thousand Years of Longing” is loosely based on the A.S. Byatt short story “The Djinn and the Nightingale.” It received a standing ovation when it opened at Cannes. The film cost $60 million to make and grossed just under $20 million. “Three Thousand Years of Longing” is a story about a story and storytellers with fantastic acting led by Tilda Swinton and Idris Elba. The special effects are bent more on beauty than violence. (Maybe Miller can take on Byatt’s “A Stone Woman” next).

Each year many small films are made that represent a labor of love for the filmmakers, (though most won’t come close to the budget George Miller can muster). So this year, if you happen to watch the awards, I hope you can find a film that is special to you, that is not included in the fanfare. In my view, it just may be the rare shooting stars of indie films that bring a richly human, if brief and tenuous light, to the broader constellation of movie-making. 

In the Drawing Room 

By Rainier Maria Rilke 

They are all around us, these lordly men 

in courtiers’ attire and ruffled shirts 

like an evening sky that gradually 

loses its light to the constellations; and these ladies, 

delicate, fragile, enlarged by their dresses, 

one hand poised on the neck-ribbon of their lapdog. 

They are close to each of us, next to the reader, 

beside us as we gaze at the objets d’art 

they left behind, yet still possess. 

Tactful, they leave us undisturbed 

to live life as we grasp it 

and as they could never comprehend it. 

They wanted to bloom 

and to bloom is to be beautiful. 

But we want to ripen, 

and for that we open ourselves to darkness and travail.

~

Watch for this story in the spring edition of Kernel, the in-house zine of the Onyx Theatre, theonyxtheatre.com

A Few Notes on the Magic of Indie Documentaries

07 Saturday Jan 2023

Posted by Pamela Biery in Film Reviews, Nevada City, Uncategorized, writers and writing

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Someday I’ll write an article about why I fell in love with independent film. In this article, I’ll try to tell people what it is that’s so unique about a handcrafted film featuring real people. I’ll want to talk about how personal passion drives projects, how they become film, and all the special innately human situations encountered in the process. Especially important is how people give up several years of their lives to create a true story and film it. 

The ideal independent film would be unfiltered and it would probably have to be a story that would include how the making of this film changed their lives and the lives of the people around them and held within it the kernel that could change other people’s lives—the kernel of a great story is transformative, for the participants and the audience.

It’s this kernel, this genuine human experience with all of its imperfect texture, that we seem to crave as humans. Independent film first and foremost for me is about sharing a deeply human experience and all the many qualities that this encompasses.

Recently released “Salt from Bonneville” has all of these qualities. Just think about it — two guys from Ukraine decide to rebuild a 1951 Russian 350 cc motorbike and then once built, challenge the vintage record on the Bonneville Salt Flats during Speed Week. This tale of course encompasses moving from one part of the world to another with highly technical, fragile irreplaceable equipment through several layers of bureaucracy and asking for something that most likely, no one has ever done. It’s a film that’s as much about the journey as the process. The outcomes are still changing as Ukraine is now at war. Mechanics, riders, and a motorcycle find themselves in America with a great story and an ending that is unexpected. Asked about their intention in building the bike and bringing it to Speed Week, Nazar said it was his and Max’s intent to make some good news about Ukraine and give people some hope. This film and its record-making run were covered by virtually all Ukrainian networks, winning recognition through online screening with Docu Days UA, Kharkiv Meet Docs, and Kyiv International Film Festival.

Whether you find yourself at the Onyx Theatre, the Onyx Downtown, at an independent film festival or perhaps streaming something online, I encourage you to remember the value of an independent voice, ready to tell you a great story. Independent documentaries sometimes hold that slightly magical kernel that keeps us remembering how wonderful slightly off-kilter cinema can be.

Published in Kernel, The Onyx Theatre’s Zine, Fall 2022

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  • Exploring the Legacy of Manzanar: From Film to Play to Book
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  • Constellations 
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