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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T190000
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DTSTAMP:20260403T132909
CREATED:20221111T200653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221111T213703Z
UID:16316-1668711600-1668717900@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Light Sleeper at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:John LeTour (Willem Dafoe) is shown writing at a desk in his largely empty apartment at night\, shirtless. There is a tall\, stylized lamp behind him and a wine bottle sitting on the table next to a glass. \n“They figure you can tell a D.D. anything. Things they would never tell anyone else\,” drug dealer John LeTour (Willem Dafoe) narrates in writer-director Paul Schrader’s 1992 film Light Sleeper. The line frames  a scene that features David Spade as one of LeTour’s customers\, sitting in his underwear and going off on an unhinged philosophical rant while snorting cocaine. \nIt’s quite comic but helps draw us into LeTour’s illicit but comfortable world\, illustrating the control he tries to exert over his life as he navigates a range of shady\, unpredictable characters and absorbs the news that his boss (Susan Sarandon) wants to get out of the business. Cinematographer Ed Lachman’s shots of rainy Manhattan streets and half-lit car interiors\, alongside the baritone vocals of Michael Been’s song “World On Fire\,” combine in the film’s powerful opening.  \nThis being a Schrader film\, all his  trademark elements are at work: the lonely male protagonist\, his desperate fixation on a woman (Dana Delany\, as LeTour’s ex Marianne)\, and the mounting sense that the narrative is  bound for a final spasm of violence. Then again\, Roger Ebert wrote at the time of Light Sleeper‘s release: “This movie isn’t about plot\, it’s about a style of life\, and the difficulty of preserving self-respect and playing fair when your income depends on selling people stuff that will make them hate you.”  \nLeTour at once understands the bleak confines of his life but holds out hope for something greater. Even in Dafoe’s remarkable career\, this performance is a standout: tightly wound\, both aloof and deeply needy\, all those edges sharpened to a handsome prime. He makes it pretty alluring to get wrapped up in an existence most of us would not actually want to share. \n—Scott Gordon
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/light-sleeper-at-union-south-marquee/
LOCATION:The Marquee Cinema\, 1308 W Dayton St #245\, Madison\, WI\, 53715\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/02125228/lightsleeper_header.jpg
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DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T220000
DTSTAMP:20260403T132909
CREATED:20221111T211004Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221114T060402Z
UID:16323-1668711600-1668722400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:The Plains at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:A shot from the backseat of Andrew Rakowski’s Hyundai Elantra shows him (right) and director David Easteal in the passenger’s seat (left) shortly after leaving their office park for the day. \nExcerpt from Grant Phipps’ review and interview with director David Easteal: \nDavid Easteal finds a new meditative grammar for the road movie in The Plains (2022)\, a rigorously composed docufiction epic about our habitual commute\, the intimacy of impermanence\, and the subtly direct intermediary of technology. \nIn the casting of himself as a secondary character to the film’s principal traveler (and occasional chauffeur) Andrew Rakowski\, Easteal’s film feels endlessly amidst a journey—treading on business routes and Monash Freeway beyond the suburbs of Melbourne\, Australia\, meandering through the life and times of its quinquagenarian driver over a 12-month period. A fixed static shot in the backseat of Rakowski’s compact Hyundai Elantra frames his world view\, quite literally\, as he peers out at the skyline and his fellow 5 p.m. commuters rolling along between traffic lights and km/h speed limit signs. But it’s the audible space within the car’s interior and Rakowski’s routine that command attention over a nearly three-hour duration\, whether it’s listening to the hum of talk radio (on 93.1 and 105.9 presets) for a minute after turning the ignition\, phoning his longtime wife Cheri or 95-year-old mother Inga at a nursing home (through his earbuds)\, chatting with fellow barrister and firm colleague Easteal\, or simply sitting speechless as the gusting ambiance of the roadway fills the vehicle’s cozy\, confined environs. \nIn its series of plainspoken\, philosophical car conversations\, The Plains shares some commonality with the tradition of Iranian art cinema from the minds of Abbas Kiarostami (Taste Of Cherry\, Ten) or Jafar Panahi (Taxi Tehran). But the film’s earnest virtues align it more closely with the nearly dialogue-free documentary Cousin Jules (1972)\, Dominique Benicheti’s enthralling\, almost devout five-year chronicle of an elderly French couple’s daily agrarian rituals. Easteal reapplies a similar aesthetic to Benicheti’s to construct a film deeply rooted in the customs of contemporary Australia and shifting landscapes like so many other places in the post-industrialized Western world (including Madison).
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/the-plains-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/02125223/theplainsfilm-hed.jpg
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