May 02, 2006

the exhorbitant city

There is a final point about the exhorbitant city that might be noted. As dream and idea the city projects a specific kind of eroticism. This eroticism has nothing to do with romantic cliches or, as Roland Barthes reminds us, with red-light districts. Rather, it relates to the kinds of uncertain sociality found in cities, where social relations with others are either changing or have broken down. The "erotic dimension" in the most general sense is the experience of these new forms of often painful sociality, which takes place always with a mix of desire and puzzlement, where eroticism vies with confusion. It is in this sense that the city is erotic and becomes "the site of our encounter with the other ... the privileged site where the other is and where we ourselves are the other, and the site where one plays". Barthes stresses play and the ludic, the pleasure of the spatial text; but there is also a darker side that he does not emphasize but that the best urban films made today do. In the cinematic city bizarre symptoms of the erotic include the sudden eruption of irrational impulses and obsessions coming apparently from nowhere to take possession of the individual, like the uncontrollable urge to steal motorcars and peacocks in Dervis Zaim's Somersault in a Coffin, a Turkish film set in Istanbul; or the spectacle of the disappointed lover gorging himself on cans of pineapples that have passed their use-by date in the Hong Kong film Chungking Express.

                    -Ackbar Abbas, 'Cinema, the City, and the Cinematic' in Global Cities (2003)

April 16, 2006

skylines

A recent post saw Whitebait misreading Myrick at Asiapundit and initially missing a great link to Diserio's 'Top 15 Skylines in the World'. It is the kind of list that makes grown anal-retentive bloggeurs go weak at the knees.

Hongkong4

His list (including excellent images):
1. Hong Kong
2. Chicago
3. Shanghai
4. New York City
5. Tokyo
6. Singapore
7. Toronto
8. Kuala Lumpur
9. Shenzen
10.Seoul
11. Sao Paolo
12. Sydney
13. Frankfurt
14. Dubai
15. Seattle

Well, Whitebait certainly agrees on his number one and the top four overall. But to W's mind, New York should go to number two, Shanghai three and Chicago fourth. Tokyo, as readers will know, is a much beloved city for Whitebait but it doesn't rank as highly for this bloggeur in the skyline stakes. The dispersion of its skyline into multiple nodes produces a different kind of urban effect that almost takes it out of a consideration of 'skylines' in the conventional sense (though the view from the Rainbow Bridge is outstanding). In a different way places like Rome and Paris, which have sublime cityscapes, are similarly ineligible for this list. But that is a discussion for another post.

Back to the list then.  Sydney seems a bit hard done by here and to Whitebait's mind should probably pip SIngapore. As for the rest ... erm, he isn't sure as he hasn't had a chance to visit those cities and assess yet. Research funding offers welcomed.

BTW, he is not meaning to damn with faint praise when he says if we were to start a 'boutique skyline' list, Whitebait would be nominating Brisbane (viewed from Storey Bridge) as a top contender. It is certainly the best Australian city skyline after Sydney. Biggest ain't necessarily the most impressive.

December 24, 2005

holiday screenings

So it’s that time of year when some serious listing begins (for a really mental take on this--in the best sense--check Woebot’s beautiful scans of his top 100 records when they are successfully loaded).

So, Whitebait would like to offer his guide to twenty classic ‘city’ films worth watching for the first time or once again. This list is for when you might be lurking at the video shop over the next week or so looking for something interesting to watch. Get more details on each release at imd. Nothing surprising nor obscurantist here – just a mix of generally well know popular/fun/arty stuff. He isn’t arguing that these are ‘the’ best city films (and do pitch in with your own recommendations in the comments please), just the ones that have tended to lodge in his mind for whatever reason. His definition of a ‘city film’ is one where the urban setting or environment takes on the status of an actor, or becomes a key point of meditation.

So, it isn’t enough that the film is just has the city as a backdrop - that would be too easy wouldn’t it.

In alphabetical order (doh!):

All_about_1

1. All About My Mother - this may seem tenuous given the criteria but it gets on the list for that one perfect Freudian scene when Manuela is shuttling from Madrid to Barcelona. A train tunnel, an exquisite musical buildup and then a taxi past Sagrada Familiar.  One of the most exhilarating moments of recent cinema.

Bladerunner_1

2. Bladerunner – is it Los Angeles or really Tokyo? Doesn’t matter as it is still stands brilliantly today as we keep on marching into the cyborg future that arrived 100 years ago.

Chinatown_1

3. Chinatown – yes, Los Angeles figures strongly. Crooked water politics and noir in the land of sunshine.

Chungking_express

4. Chungking Express – crowded and deserted Hong Kong exteriors and the gorgeous Faye Wong sneaking into a policeman’s house to provide a free makeover (life before Queer Eye!).

Collateral

5. Collateral – brilliant in every way. And a great tongue-in-cheek thriller ending in the sense that like all good recent LA films it slams the idea that there is life in the city beyond car travel - by equating the metro rail system with death.

Dark_city

6. Dark City – familiar sci-fi noir themes but very handsomely and adeptly executed.

Falling_down

7. Falling Down – yes, this film has a crappy racist politics at the heart of it but it is one hundred times more complex and intelligent in the way it goes about these complex politics than detractors will acknowledge. And in doing so it offers some handy insights into the politics of city space and mobility.

Fellini_roma

8. Fellini’s Roma/La Dolce Vita – Whitebait learnt some Italian for a while and this was a great way to practice. He likes the essay-like Roma just because it seemed a damn weird movie the first time around. And the second time.

La_haine

9. La Haine – was a film of note before the recent Parisian uprisings but W. suspects it might be even more gripping and pertinent now.

La_story

10. L.A. Story – still some great and eminently repeatable one-liners despite the unsatisfying romance narrative at the centre. And a reference to that great Martin poem, ‘Oh pointy birds, oh pointy pointy …’

Manhattan_2

11. Manhattan – Whitebait remembers a time when he did trust film critics who would write that the latest Woody Allen film was worth shelling out for at the cinema.

Naked

12. Naked – a brutal and funny film in equal doses. Life on some very dark English streets

Short_cuts

13. Short Cuts – this is tied up in some bad memories for Whitebait (and he still hasn’t plucked up the courage to see it again) but because Raymond Carver’s stories were the inspiration it still goes on the list.

Summer_of_sam

14. Summer of Sam / Do the Right Thing – while DtRT is the acknowledged classic (so damn hot and tense on those New York streets) … SoS goes back to the late seventies and reworks similar themes with another great soundtrack.

The_big_sleep

15. The Big Sleep – who knew it rained in Los Angeles so much?

End_of_violence

16. The End of Violence / Wings of Desire – EoV isn’t a successful film but it has a great eerie take on L.A. and Bill Pulman is in great form. More interesting than satisfying. If you aren’t in the mood for that then go straight to WoD.

Last_wave

17. The Last Wave – a completely different representation of Sydney in its articulation of the unease that remains in a place forcibly acquired from its indigenous inhabitants.

Tokyo_story

18. Tokyo Story - it is nearly all studio sets and yet it paints a damning picture of the role of the urban in the disintegration of familial bonds and individual selfishness (Beware – the pace is slow in a good way).

Sans_soleil19. Sans Soleil – more an essay on memory and therefore quite a different viewing experience. But many of the scenes from Tokyo remain etched in my mind.

Wonderland20. Wonderland – would contend for number one if that was the objective of this exercise. A moped riding through the streets, trains in the night, a Michael Nyman score, blind dating, London streets, a barking neighbour’s dog who drives a woman to the brink … this is The Poetry of City Life 101. Exceptional.

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