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Sight & Sound June 2021
Mark Kermode and Prano Bailey–Bond talk Censor and the 80s British censorship massacre. Read if you dare!
Plus the history of ‘video nasties’, Kelly Reichardt on First Cow, Suzanne Lindon’s Spring Blossom, the sprawling brilliance of Robert Altman’s Nashville, and vintage Jack Nicholson
It’s the issue they didn’t want you to read!
Sight & Sound avoids the censor’s scissors, but can’t resist the sinster draw of Prano Bailey–Bond’s wicked yet darkly beautiful Censor.
Mark Kermode joins Bailey–Bond in discussing the 1980s tabloid frenzy surrounding so-called ‘video nasties’ – unrated VHS horror releases that snuck past the beady-eyed BBFC – and her debut feature Censor, an 80s period piece dripping with paranoia and psychological scares.
Also, Alexandra Heller-Nicholas refutes the claim that horror is “fundamentally unladylike” by tracking the genre in female filmmakers’ work throughout film history, and Kim Newman highlights six of the best British ‘nasties’.
If you can bear to keep looking, there’s more from Newman, who takes on Mary Whitehouse et al and presents a history of the ‘video nasty’ moral panic – which the ever-measured Daily Mail deemed “sadism” and “rape of our children’s minds”.
Now a change of speed, from hysteria to history. Kelly Reichardt transports us to 1820s America in First Cow, her take on the dawn of capitalism in the Pacific Northwest. Speaking to Ryan Gilbey, Reichardt espouses the virtues of slowness: “You can take your time. It’s the difference between showing an audience something, and letting an audience see something.”
21-year-old Suzanne Lindon wrote her debut feature Spring Blossom when she was 15, and directed it at 19. James Mottram spoke to Lindon, daughter of French actors, about her love of dance and her film’s age-gap romance.
Geoff Andrew gets lost in Nashville. Recalling his first trip into Robert Altman’s sprawling portrait of 1970s America, Andrew tentatively crowned it the greatest American film since Citizen Kane – but has this feeling remained?
And from our archive, a 1974 interview with Jack Nicholson, in which he speaks to John Russell Taylor about directing, collaborating with Roger Corman, the social responsibilities of being an actor and America’s waning interest in arthouse cinema.
Plus regulars:
Editorial
Seal of approval
Rushes
Gimme Shelter
The directors of pandemic-prescient films The Pink Cloud and Apples talk about the way lockdown has changed the films they made, and how making the films changed the ways they approached lockdown. By Jonathan Romney.
+ New wave: pandemic stories. By Pamela Hutchinson.
Rising star: Aneil Karia
The director of Surge in profile. By Will Massa.
A time capsule of trans life
How does A Change of Sex, the trans documentary series in Adam Curtis’s Can’t Get You out of My Head, stand up 40 years on? By Rachel Pronger.
In focus: Enys Men
Fresh from the shoot, the Cornish director of Bait Mark Jenkin takes us behind the scenes of his new ecosophical horror. By Isabel Stevens.
In production
New film and TV projects by Mark Romanek, Cate Blanchett, Francis Lee, Noah Baumbach, Martin Scorsese and Emer Reynolds.
‘It’s about expanding imagination’
Sheffield Doc/Fest’s new director Cíntia Gil reveals a change in programming ethos and priorities for the 2021 edition. By Nick Bradshaw.
+ Four to see: selected by Doc/Fest programmers
Call me by my name
As Thandiwe Newton reclaims her name, we explore the history of whitewashing film stars’ credits and how the tide is starting to turn. By Christina Newland.
+ ‘They can learn to say Uzoamaka’: why stars are keeping their names
Cinema paradiso
Take a tour through the BFI Southbank’s luminous history as the cinema reopens with a season of films chosen by filmmakers. By Pamela Hutchinson.
Dream palaces: BFI Southbank
Gurinder Chadha, the director of Bend It like Beckham and Blinded by the Light, reveals the pivotal role the NFT played in her film education.
A world just out of reach
Aleem Khan talks about how loss, Brexit and summers spent on the White Cliffs of Dover helped to shape his moving drama After Love. By Will Massa.
Obituary: Monte Hellman, 1929-2021
A cult legend and patron saint of cinephiles, Monte Hellman found his filmmaking road as stark as any of his protagonists’. By Brad Stevens.
+ Monte Hellman in his own words
Obituary: Bertrand Tavernier, 1941-2021
A life-long champion of cinema, the bearish director, critic, publicist and historian applied his political convictions to a sweep of styles. By David Thompson.
What’s up, doc?
With the rise of the ‘docbuster’ and an archive-only BBC4, what is the future for quiet storytelling and new voices in documentary? By Jeanie Finlay.
Wide Angle
Artists’ film: Matthew passion
Wildlife management, cultural politics and Greek gods collide in the latest instalment of Matthew Barney’s personal mythology. By Ben Nicholson.
+ Barney’s version: three key works
Primal screen: local attraction
The past isn’t always a foreign country: a visit there from the alien world of lockdown can feel a lot like coming home. By Lawrence Napper.
Reviews
Films of the month
After Love
Reviewed by Pamela Hutchinson.
Zana
Antoneta Kastrati’s portrait of Lume, a woman yearning for pregnancy amidst oppresive patriarchal pressures, shows that it takes a village to conceive a child. Reviewed by Lisa Mullen.
plus reviews of:
Antebellum
Cowboys
Earwig and the Witch
First Cow
Guest of Honour
Henry Glassie: Field Work
Homeward
Labyrinth of Cinema
Red Moon Tide
A Space in Time
State Funeral
Surge
True Mothers
Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation
Underdogs
Valley of Souls
Violation
Television of the month
Exterminate All the Brutes
Raoul Peck’s four-part series patiently, bluntly retells and reconstructs the grand history of human extermination that accompanied European expansion, from the Crusades to Columbian conquest and slavery to the Holocaust and Hiroshima. Reviewed by Paul Tickell.
plus reviews of:
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
The Flight Attendant
The Nevers
The Underground Railroad
Home cinema features
Counting for something: I Start Counting
Little noticed at the time and forgotten since, this British chiller of the late 1960s now looks like a dark, sly masterpiece. Reviewed by Trevor Johnston.
Rediscovery: Mandabi
Restored at last, Ousmane Sembène’s simple story of a man wrestling with a money order emerges as a magnificent parable. Reviewed by Kaleem Aftab.
Archive television: Between the Lines: Series 1
Robert Hanks rewatches Line of Duty’s grittier predecessor.
Lost and Found: Daddy Nostalgie
The late Bertrand Tavernier’s autumnal family drama is shot through with unspoken feeling and a sense of loss. Reviewed by Noel Hess.
plus reviews of:
The Chalk Garden
Flowers of Shanghai
Two Films by John Ford: Straight Shooting/Hell Bent
Journey to the Far Side of the Sun
Karloff at Columbia: The Black Room/The Man They Could Not Hang/The Man with Nine Lives/Before I Hang/The Devil Commands/The Boogie Man Will Get You
Two Films by Ken Loach: Fatherland/Carla’s Song
Nosferatu in Venice
Secrets & Lies
Books
Anton Walbrook: A Life of Masks and Mirrors by James Downs, Peter Lang reviewed by Pamela Hutchinson.
Grave of the Fireflies: BFI Film Classics by Alex Dudok de Wit (BFI Publishing/Bloomsbury) reviewed by Michael Leader.
The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock: An Anatony of the Master of Suspense by Edward White (Norton) reviewed by Philip Kemp.
Letters
Endings
Gun Crazy
Joseph H. Lewis’s taboo-busting 1950 B movie pushes the analogy between sex and violence all the way to a shattering climax. By Beatrice Loayza.
Get Sight & Sound back issues here
SKU | SSJune2021 |
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Publisher(s) | BFI |
Format | Paperback |
Original publication date | May 2021 |