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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221105T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221111T124500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221105T200110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221108T200216Z
UID:16266-1667662200-1668170700@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Armageddon Time at Marcus Point Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Johnny Davis (Jaylin Webb) and Paul Graff (Banks Repeta) both smile while running through a tunnel under a bridge in a park. \n“Armageddon Time” is also screening at Marcus Palace Cinema and AMC Fitchburg 18. \nIn James Gray’s Armageddon Time (2022)\, assimilation comes with the crushing weight of responsibility that can never really be lived up to. Based on Gray’s own adolescence in 1980 New York City\, his semi-fictionalized analogue Paul Graff (Banks Repeta) is a daydreaming\, quietly defiant Jewish sixth grader\, who strikes up a friendship with Johnny Davis (Jaylin Webb)\, a black student repeating the grade. When both are singled out as troublemakers by their teacher Mr. Turkeltaub (Andrew Polk)\, their relationship awakens Paul to his fishbowl of privilege\, as Johnny continually bears a greater brunt of the consequences for their shared schemes. \nPaul is more than a little naive of the true circumstances of Johnny’s problems at home (left to fend for himself most of the time\, living with his grandmother who has dementia). For better or worse\, the film stands as Gray’s admission of guilt for the implications of actions he once didn’t understand. The film’s steady perspective and its lessons are centered more on Paul than Johnny\, who isn’t quite as fleshed out. Gray sticks to what he knows\, even as he acknowledges the pain it caused back then. \nArmageddon Time really excels in showcasing the gap between Paul and Johnny’s family support networks\, however flawed they may be. Paul’s mother Esther (Anne Hathaway)\, father Irving (Jeremy Strong) and especially his grandfather Aaron Rabinowitz (Anthony Hopkins) are exasperated by his artistic dreams\, his inattention in school\, and friendship with Johnny\, often giving him conflicting advice. But they clearly care\, even in their lack of understanding him. \nPaul truly connects with his grandfather who tells him to “be a mensch” and stick up for the less privileged\, while also paying to take him out of the public school to place him in the private school that his older brother Ted (Ryan Sell) attends. There Paul encounters Fred Trump (John Diehl) and Maryanne Trump (Jessica Chastain)\, the latter who gives a speech extolling the virtues of the Reaganite bootstrapping. While Paul’s family hates Reagan\, they sincerely believe his mixing with this crowd of elitists will ensure their survival. To twist the old Carlin adage\, it’s a big club\, and you better try your damndest to get in it. \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/armageddon-time-at-marcus-point-cinema/
LOCATION:Marcus Point Cinema\, 7825 Big Sky Drive\, Madison\, WI\, 53719\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/02125244/armageddontime-eventhed-scaled.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221110T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221110T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221104T203338Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221107T172605Z
UID:16255-1668106800-1668114000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Rimini at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:At a long shot from a glitzy stage\, singer Richie Bravo (Michael Thomas) leads his dozens of fans in a singalong. \nExcerpt from Maxwell Courtright’s review: \nThe milieu of writer-director Ulrich Seidl’s films provides a unique sandbox for looking at our difficulties in living with modern history. This sort of blank stare towards contemporary pain is nothing new for Seidl\, who continues in this very Austrian vein found in films by Michael Haneke and writers like Thomas Bernhard. Bernhard\, in particular\, seems like a touchstone\, as he shares with Seidl a deep sense of frustration with the Austrian national identity. (Bernhard famously forbade the performance of his plays in Austria following his death in 1989.) Both authors struggle with the post-Holocaust identity of their country\, where they clearly feel they hold a sort of hereditary responsibility for the atrocities of yore. There is no clear path forward.  \nSeidel repeatedly underlines protagonist and lounge singer Richie Bravo (Michael Thomas)’s Trump-like qualities in the film\, from his melting spray tan to the cheap decal self-portraits that decorate his home with thumbs-ups and toothy grins. But Seidl retains some sympathy for this oaf\, as his failures are soft. Bravo is a true buffoon who has inherited a debt he’s not prepared to atone for. He’s on the other side of luck without a family\, relying on outdated music with an ever-declining fan base for his income. For Bravo\, his overheated pop hits of yesterday are the cultural equivalent of a Band-Aid for a deep wound\, and his struggles to create a life for himself in the remote locale of Rimini are reminiscent of a country unsure how to move beyond its past.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/rimini-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T204500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
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
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221117T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
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
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221118T204500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221111T212237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221115T180109Z
UID:16324-1668798000-1668804300@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:All Is Forgiven at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:Annette (Marie-Christine Friedrich) and her young daughter Pamela (Victoire Rousseau) listen to the piano at a family gathering. \nExcerpt from Alisyn Amant’s review: \nAs Mia Hansen-Løve’s directorial debut\, All Is Forgiven (2007) is the logical birthplace of the cinematic tone that becomes distinct in her later films\, like Bergman Island (2021). She immerses viewers in moments of intense realism with characters Victor\, Annette\, and Pamela in the majority of the 105-minute running time. Take\, for example\, the portrayal of Victor’s addiction: one may expect the archetypal\, gritty\, and raucous scene of a person shooting heroin into their veins or snorting cocaine amidst dancing bodies and loud music. In All Is Forgiven\, the picture of addiction instead becomes a man wandering from park to park to find a dealer\, slipping away from outings with his daughter to run “errands” and waking up to the anticlimactic overdose of a lover. The expository tension between a dependence on drugs and the decay of a family still makes room for the subtle details of life: the sound of shoes on pavement or gravel\, the ripples of water on the surface of a pond\, the rustling of leaves and flowers. \nWhile that pervading sense of reality successfully creates an intelligent\, picturesque aura\, it simultaneously becomes a detriment to the viewer’s ability to connect with its characters as fixtures in a story. Moments that are supposed to be seen as monumental and emotional\, according to the typicality of narrative structure\, fall flat in service to realism. But regardless of one’s preference for the levels of tilt toward realism or romanticism\, All Is Forgiven is nonetheless an admirable debut that showcases the cinematic notions of a then-budding\, now-established director.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/all-is-forgiven-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221120T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221120T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221111T213437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221111T213437Z
UID:16326-1668969000-1668976200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Sonata (2021) at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:Grzegorz Płonka (Michal Sikorski) plays the piano in his father’s study. \nComing-of-age biopic Sonata (2021) closes out the Polish Film Festival at the Union South Marquee\, which begins on Sunday\, November 13\, with Illusion (2022)\, and then continues the following Sunday\, November 20\, with a triple feature of Fucking Bornholm (2022)\, Black Sheep (2022) and Sonata. \nBartosz Blaschke’s film is based on the true story of Grzegorz Płonka (Michal Sikorski)\, who is misdiagnosed with autism as a child in the mid-1990s\, only to discover at age 14 that he actually suffers from hearing loss that prevented him from processing the upper registers necessary to understand speech. When Grzegorz finally gets fitted with a hearing aid thanks to the insistence of a home caregiver\, he’s set upon a difficult road toward a meaningful life: learning to speak and read in his teens\, and obsessively devoting himself to becoming a concert pianist\, with his ultimate goal to perform Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata” (which lends the film its name).  \nThe film uses similar audio effects to Sound Of Metal (2020) in the scene where Grzegorz finally hears clearly for the first time\, allowing the audience to perceive as he does. Previously\, his relationship with music consisted of pounding on a piano to feel the vibrations. Sonata also shares Sound Of Metal‘s more nuanced take on a disability narrative rather than standing as a simple triumph-over-adversity tale: much emphasis is put on Grzegorz’s early life being left to languish due to sheer institutional indifference despite the efforts of his exasperated parents (Małgorzata Foremniak and Lukasz Simlat) to get someone to respond on a human level instead of just enforcing the rules and their own expectations. \nWhen Grzegorz finally speaks\, he often has a frustratingly black-and-white interpretation of social interactions\, and a megalomaniac focus on his life goal of becoming a pianist. At every turn\, he’s met by people who qualify his talent as “playing well for a deaf person.” Grzegorz doesn’t so much want to prove them all wrong as he gets stuck on not fully grasping why someone would want to keep him from fully expressing himself. Understandably\, he lashes out when clashing once again with the harshness of those more concerned with checking boxes than letting him release his pent-up emotions.  \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/sonata-2021-at-union-south-marquee/
LOCATION:The Marquee Cinema\, 1308 W Dayton St #245\, Madison\, WI\, 53715\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221130T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221130T201500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221126T225031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221126T225209Z
UID:16385-1669834800-1669839300@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Mills Folly Microcinema: Seeing Pink\, videos by Ariel Teal at Arts + Literature Laboratory
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Becoming” (2018)\, borrowed from “Buffy The Vampire Slayer\,” of Teal’s favorite character Faith (Eliza Dushku) dancing at a club. \nFilm MFA and former instructor at UW-Milwaukee Ariel Teal\, who now studies social work in Madison\, will appear in person at this Mills Folly Microcinema event. While Teal is bringing three films that have made the rounds at experimental festivals in recent years\, they will also be premiering two new works\, Seeing and Pink Movie. \nTeal’s dual professional backgrounds have had an impact on their work in the exploration of personal trauma channeled through techniques from found footage and essay film. Difficult and direct as their practice may be\, it also has a sort of interior tenderness related to Teal dealing with their own trauma on their own terms. These films aren’t tailor-made for audiences so much as they embody a unique form of therapy to serve as a reminder for others of how their own lives may be fragmented in memory. \nAs on-screen texts in films like Becoming (2018)\, Monday Night (2018)\, and Romantic Getaway (2020) alternate between blunt descriptive statements and cut-up abstractions\, Teal shows a poetic control of their words at the sentence-level. Monday Night particularly highlights this\, with the language revealing entendres as it circles back on itself in fragments. “I hate that I didn’t see it coming” is shortened to “I hate that I\,” which is further simplified to an evocative “I hate.” \nThis trauma-informed cinema breaks with the clichés one might associate with the idea. Teal reads between the lines of the narratives we create for ourselves. Intertextual readings stand out here\, and the filmmaker intuitively understands the way our self-narratives are shaped by our aspirations toward beloved characters and forms (Buffy The Vampire Slayer and sitcom “special episodes” are central to Becoming and Romantic Getaway\, respectively). \nIf the existing work is any indication\, viewers can expect further developments in this direction from Teal’s new shorts that explore intersections of culture and the self with bracing clarity.  \n(Viewer’s note: the program features flashing lights and printed descriptions of sexual assault.) \n—Maxwell Courtright
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/mills-folly-microcinema-seeing-pink-videos-by-ariel-teal-at-arts-literature-laboratory/
LOCATION:Arts + Literature Laboratory\, 111 South Livingston Street\, Madison\, WI\, 53703\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221202T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221202T205000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221126T214255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221128T062423Z
UID:16384-1670007600-1670014200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:When You Read This Letter at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:Nightclub dancer Lola (Claude Borelli) stands ready to remove her clothes in front of the rakish Max (Philippe Lemaire)\, who regards her with smug indifference. \nExcerpt from Jason Fuhrman’s review: \nDirector Jean-Pierre Melville’s overlooked existential noir melodrama presents a counterpoint to his more popular crime films and period pieces—such as the underworld comedy of manners\, Bob Le Flambeur (1956)\, the elegant character study of an impossibly cool contract killer\, Le Samouraï (1967)\, and the gripping thriller about the French Resistance\, Army Of Shadows (1969). \nTaken at face value\, the film may appear to lack the cool precision\, calculated restraint\, and mood of contemplative ennui that define Melville’s subsequent output. However\, its atmospheric cinematography\, stylistic complexity\, and haunting ambiguities bring When You Read This Letter (1953) into alignment with the director’s most sophisticated creations. \nFilmed largely on location in Cannes\, France\, with ravishing black-and-white photography by Henri Alekan\, it holds up as a vivid panorama of a bygone time and place. The implausible\, somewhat bizarre plot of the film—which involves con artists\, blackmail\, a sadomasochistic novitiate\, sexual violence\, tragic car accidents\, an unsuccessful suicide attempt\, grand larceny\, and a tangled love triangle—feels surprisingly lurid for what was supposed to be a very “conventional” and “sensible” picture. With its many twists\, turns\, and abrupt tonal shifts\, the narrative sometimes veers toward the surreal.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/when-you-read-this-letter-at-uw-cinematheque/
LOCATION:UW Cinematheque\, 821 University Ave / 4070 Vilas Hall\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221203T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221203T201000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221126T213544Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T033907Z
UID:16383-1670092200-1670098200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:After Yang at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:Techno-sapien Yang (right) sets a camera timer to take a photo of his foster family\, then moves into frame with the rest of them (father Jake\, mother Kyra\, and daughter Mika)\, all smiling. \nKogonada retools futuristic technological conventions into a poignant tale of connection in After Yang (2021)\, a filmic tone poem\, a metaphysical chamber play on the virtues of our differences\, between the multicultural and the human and nonhuman. \nBased on a short story by Alexander Weinstein\, the film moves through an unspecified future time when couple Jake and Kyra (Colin Farrell and Jodie Turner-Smith) are raising an adopted Chinese daughter\, Mika “Mei Mei” (Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja) with the aid of android or “techno-sapien” Yang (Justin H. Min). Yang’s presence as a surrogate sibling to Mika not only offers peace of mind but fosters both a subliminal and plainspoken bond to her heritage. However\, this is momentarily severed when Yang inexplicably shuts down one night\, forcing Jake to repair him and familial unity by extension. \nFrom his background in video essays\, Kogonada lends the film a soft\, appealing precision\, the same that infused the architectural contours and paths of 2017’s low-key masterpiece Columbus. Where that film was mindfully fixated on symmetry\, After Yang is aglow with geomancy or feng shui principles that are conceptualized in the family’s Joseph Eichler house as a grand tea room and literally harmonized in fragmented song (Mitski’s faithful cover of Lily Chou-Chou’s “Glide”) throughout. The off-screen ring of wind chimes and Aska Matsumiya and Ryuichi Sakamoto’s score\, suspended in pianissimo\, further lend the film the feeling of a visual meditation tape. \nAfter Yang meshes memorial themes explored in other sci-fi dramas like Marjorie Prime (2017) and A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)\, as it’s perennially attuned to loss and the struggle between despair and hope. Ultimately\, the richly edited tapestry of quotidian\, Malickian moments\, sporadically captured and later witnessed through clips in first-person perspective from Yang’s memory bank\, reveal to the characters their collective strengths and soul—a sort of extension of the Buddhist philosophy on layers of consciousness. \nKudos to WUD Film for providing a space for a belated first-time local theatrical screening. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/after-yang-at-union-south-marquee/
LOCATION:The Marquee Cinema\, 1308 W Dayton St #245\, Madison\, WI\, 53715\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221210T174000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221215T145000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221210T204502Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221214T054148Z
UID:16506-1670694000-1671115800@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:White Noise at Marcus Point Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Babette Gladney (Greta Gerwig)\, Jack Gladney (Adam Driver)\, and their three children scream while in their red station wagon. The youngest Wilder (Henry Moore) sits masked between Jack and Babette in the front seat looking amused. \nAs a follow-up to his septupuly Oscar-nominated Marriage Story (2019)\, Noah Baumbach has used approximately $80 million of the money Netflix seems to be hemorrhaging lately to do a “one for me” movie—a project that greatly expands his visual ambitions while addressing the only subject that’s a universal concern for our species burdened with sapience. We are going to die. Yes\, you\, the person reading this\, will die someday. That fact and the various complications we create to avoid confronting it is what White Noise (2022) is more or less about. With such a lofty subject to motivate him\, Baumbach has created something sprawling\, messy and totally fascinating\, his analogue to One From The Heart (1981) or Under The Silver Lake (2018). \nAdapted from Don DeLillo’s ’80s satirical novel of the same name\, White Noise follows Jack Gladney (Adam Driver)\, a college professor who has pioneered the field of “Hitler studies\,” and his wife Babette (Greta Gerwig\, in her first acting role since 2018). They’re accompanied by four children from various previous marriages (including Raffey Cassidy of Vox Lux who plays the eldest)\, as well as Jack’s friend and fellow professor Murray (Don Cheadle)\, who hopes to popularize an academic discipline centered on Elvis Presley similar to Jack’s “Hitler studies.” \nThe group navigates a constant Altmanesque cacophony of unending information\, and naturally gravitates toward the biggest spectacle. It can be reasonably assumed that whatever commands the most attention is most important (Jack makes his living from the well of a historical spectacle that will never run dry\, after all)\, while they’re all firmly entrenched in the certainty that whatever disasters are on TV are removed from anything that could happen to them. Of course they are proven wrong\, and history intrudes on day-to-day life in the form of “The Airborne Toxic Event.” The exact nature of the danger is unclear\, but the mere fact that danger is present is enough to disturb the routine. \nThe plot is somewhat of an exaggeration of themes Baumbach has explored for his whole career\, namely the anxiety of trying to place yourself within society. He expands his palette past the character studies he’s made his name on\, incorporating visual references to Brian De Palma’s films\, to Jean-Luc Godard’s Week-end (1967) and Tout Va Bien (1972). Baumbach even casts Fassbinder regular Barbara Sukowa in a cameo toward the end of the film. \nConsumerism at once creates distraction and meaning\, and Baumbach takes care to include a corporate logo in the frame for most of the film’s running time. This ubiquity of branding culminates in an end-credits sequence scored by a new LCD Soundsystem track written especially for the movie. After all\, once you accept you’re going to die\, you might as well get on with your life.  \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/white-noise-at-marcus-point-cinema/
LOCATION:Marcus Point Cinema\, 7825 Big Sky Drive\, Madison\, WI\, 53719\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/02125139/whitenoise22-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221210T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221210T200500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221202T210909Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221210T043627Z
UID:16432-1670697000-1670702700@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Tokyo Godfathers at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:Gin\, Miyuki\, and Hana debate what to do next in their quest to return an abandoned child they found on the streets of Tokyo on Christmas Eve. \nSatoshi Kon may be best known for his animated\, surrealistic\, psychological thrillers\, so Tokyo Godfathers (2003) may stand out in writer-director-character designer’s oeuvre as a rollicking buddy adventure that just happens to be Christmas-themed. But it’s quite a natural follow-up to Kon’s postmodernist masterpiece Millennium Actress (2001)\, about a reclusive movie star modeled after the real-life Setsuko Hara (of Yasujirō Ozu’s Tokyo Story). \nTokyo Godfathers boasts a restless pacing and zany energy contained in the dynamic between its trio of drifters—the gruff drunkard Gin (voiced by Tōru Emori)\, boisterous trans woman Hana (Yoshiaki Umegaki)\, and penitent teen runaway Miyuki (Aya Okamoto)—who find an abandoned newborn baby on Christmas Eve and collectively set out to locate her parents based on a mere photograph left at the scene. Through their rag-tag detective work\, the trio uncover truths of their own characters and shortcomings in tragicomic fashion\, realizing they may not be radically different from the struggling parents who saw themselves as incapable of caring for a child. \nWhile something about the film’s developments may feel curbed in its concise 92-minute running time\, Kon’s compellingly larger-than-life staging and beautifully diverse visual flourishes elevate its dramatic rushes through the snowy streets and alleys of Tokyo. Miyuki’s fantastical dream and Hana’s reflective haiku\, in particular\, both offer ruminative respites that showcase the miraculous depths of Kon’s talent that’s deeply missed today. \nWUD Film will be screening the Japanese language version with English subtitles. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/tokyo-godfathers-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/2022/12/02125150/tokyogodfathers-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221221T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221221T230000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20221216T184246Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221219T133111Z
UID:16547-1671649200-1671663600@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:"Or… (night)" Solstice Celebration at Common Sage
DESCRIPTION:A handbill features a negative image of a sprig of sage with all the relevant event information. \nThere’s uncommon hospitality at Common Sage\, Tim Russell and Liz Sexe’s avant-garde-focused but distinctly cozy house venue. The music-dance power duo welcomed friends into their recreation of La Monte Young’s “Dream House” to mark the composer’s October birthday. As Russell and Sexe continue to get back into the swing of more regular hosting\, they’re planning a send-off to 2022 in the form of a winter solstice celebration\, “Or… (night)\,” as a tribute to another boundary-pushing composer\, James Tenney (and to the longest night). \nRussell and Sexe have gathered an inspiring crew of local talent\, including noisemakers Emili Earhart\, David Henry\, and Ari Smith\, to interpret Tenney’s 1970-1971 piece of indeterminacy\, “For Percussion Perhaps\, Or…” While there are a number of recorded performances that elicit the piece’s nuanced drone via prepared hurdy-gurdy\, trombone\, and electronics\, and even solo keyboard (you like Julia Holter\, right?)\, the instrumental configurations for this house show will remain a surprise. \nBeyond that\, most beckoning about this special event is the union of artistic mediums\, with short film projection by Barry Paul Clark and dancers Sexe and Mauriah Donegan Kraker\, who will all add further visual flair through their kinetic chemistry. \nFor those relatively unfamiliar with Tenney’s history\, take it from writer Bradford Bailey\, who asserts that Tenney’s work encompassed “nearly all of the central conceits used by avant-garde composers during the second half of the twentieth century.” Perhaps there’s no better way to find your way in than through the doors of Common Sage. \nPotluck begins at 7 p.m.\, with performances to follow at 8 p.m. And\, if it’s temperate enough outdoors\, Common Sage will start a fire pit in their backyard. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/or-night-solstice-celebration-at-common-sage/
LOCATION:Common Sage\, 934 Drake St\, Madison\, WI\, 53715\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/02125126/ornight-commonsage-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230105T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230105T233000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230101T214225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230101T214647Z
UID:16607-1672948800-1672961400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Sex Ed Disco Dance Party at Crucible
DESCRIPTION:A cropped version of Sruti Mohan and Elliot Jewell’s very late ’70s-designed event flyer with a prominent disco ball and rainbow. \nThe first couple weeks of the new year after the holidays can often feel muted\, introspective\, and distinctively less cheery by comparison. But consider the colorful cure for those midwinter blues at the Crucible’s Sex Ed Disco Dance Party this Thursday night\, which unites a number of Madison creatives in a fundraiser for a new\, vital documentary by videographer and filmmaker Gracie K Wallner. \nSince last year\, Wallner (Winter Is Alive\, Blood Runs Out) has been assembling a work that champions queer and inclusive sex education in our community. Not only have they gathered friends to help spread the word\, including Docx\, French Jessica\, as well as DJs Sarah Akawa\, Avalon\, and Coop there it is\, but also arranged for this event to offer safe sex supplies (courtesy of OutReach LGBTQ+ Community Center)\, paper resources\, themed cookies (confections by Blue Bedroom Records founder Cam Davis)\, and even a runway costume contest. \nWhile the doc is still in production\, it features LGBTQ+ AODA Advocate Linda Lenzke and many other active members specific to the Madison community\, including educators\, therapists\, and historians\, who shed a light on the hidden history\, changing landscape\, and universal need for queer sex education. \nAcknowledging the superlative character of Wallner’s past work\, which has oscillated between narrative and documentary modes\, their current project will undoubtedly carry a similarly sophisticated visual style and conscientious eye. Funds raised at this groovy 18+ danceathon will support all of Wallner’s efforts with interviews\, clearing image copyrights\, and commissioning original artwork. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/sex-ed-disco-dance-party-at-crucible/
LOCATION:Crucible\, 3116 Commercial Avenue\, Madison\, WI\, 53714\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/sexeddisco-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230106T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230106T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230101T220353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230103T011845Z
UID:16608-1673035200-1673038800@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Ghost Wars at MMSD Planetarium
DESCRIPTION:A mockup by Thomas Ferrella from “Ghost Wars\,” featuring a US dollar scorched in bright red and etched with atom bomb symbols over its Federal Reserve seals. \nEach winter seems to facilitate a new live multimedia collaboration between video artist and cinematographer Aaron Granat and multi-hyphenate BlueStem Jazz curator and co-founder Thomas Ferrella. From Mindstorm at the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) Planetarium in March 2020 to Shadowlands at Garver Feed Mill in February 2021\, the two have been concocting psychedelic whirlwinds of ecstatic digital visuals and and jazz-inspired electroacoustic soundscapes (led by Ferrella’s “sonic frontiers collective” You Of All People). \nTheir newest project\, Ghost Wars\, premiered at Gallery Marzen in May 2022\, but now returns to the MMSD Planetarium here\, on the nights of January 6 and 7 (both starting at 8 p.m.)\, with a decidedly incendiary political angle. If Shadowlands (part of the Winter Is Alive cooler world carnival of 2021) delved into changing wetland ecosystems in both the abstract and on vividly literal terms\, Ghost Wars pushes boundaries further in its rippling raze of the personal and public desolations of late capitalism and endless war. Its imagery\, crafted or shot by Ferrella and manipulated by Granat in real time\, draws upon familiar totems and symbols (Ferrella’s art prints\, for one) to metamorphose a tapestry of American avarice and strife. As evidenced in a short preview below\, some of the stark visual components permeating the frame involve the atom bomb-etched American dollar bills sewn into the national flag. \nAlong with You Of All People’s extended technique and effects-laden spoken word providing the melodies and textures to this live brew under the Planetarium dome\, Granat and Ferrella have enlisted other local allies to enhance the breadth of the live spectacle—including Kit Caldwell (costume design)\, Ian Van D. (sculptural performance)\, and Lauren Lynch (choreography). \nAll proceeds from both unique hour-long performances will benefit the Madison chapter of Friends Of Ukraine. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/ghost-wars-at-mmsd-planetarium/
LOCATION:MMSD Planetarium\, 201 South Gammon Road\, Madison\, WI\, 53717\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/ghostwars-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230107T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230107T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230102T201532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230103T011925Z
UID:16610-1673121600-1673125200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Ghost Wars at MMSD Planetarium
DESCRIPTION:A mockup by Thomas Ferrella from “Ghost Wars\,” featuring a US dollar scorched in bright red and etched with atom bomb symbols over its Federal Reserve seals. \nEach winter seems to facilitate a new live multimedia collaboration between video artist and cinematographer Aaron Granat and multi-hyphenate BlueStem Jazz curator and co-founder Thomas Ferrella. From Mindstorm at the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) Planetarium in March 2020 to Shadowlands at Garver Feed Mill in February 2021\, the two have been concocting psychedelic whirlwinds of ecstatic digital visuals and and jazz-inspired electroacoustic soundscapes (led by Ferrella’s “sonic frontiers collective” You Of All People). \nTheir newest project\, Ghost Wars\, premiered at Gallery Marzen in May 2022\, but now returns to the MMSD Planetarium here\, on the nights of January 6 and 7 (both starting at 8 p.m.)\, with a decidedly incendiary political angle. If Shadowlands (part of the Winter Is Alive cooler world carnival of 2021) delved into changing wetland ecosystems in both the abstract and on vividly literal terms\, Ghost Wars pushes boundaries further in its rippling raze of the personal and public desolations of late capitalism and endless war. Its imagery\, crafted or shot by Ferrella and manipulated by Granat in real time\, draws upon familiar totems and symbols (Ferrella’s art prints\, for one) to metamorphose a tapestry of American avarice and strife. As evidenced in a short preview below\, some of the stark visual components permeating the frame involve the atom bomb-etched American dollar bills sewn into the national flag. \nAlong with You Of All People’s extended technique and effects-laden spoken word providing the melodies and textures to this live brew under the Planetarium dome\, Granat and Ferrella have enlisted other local allies to enhance the breadth of the live spectacle—including Kit Caldwell (costume design)\, Ian Van D. (sculptural performance)\, and Lauren Lynch (choreography). \nAll proceeds from both unique hour-long performances will benefit the Madison chapter of Friends Of Ukraine. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/ghost-wars-at-mmsd-planetarium-2/
LOCATION:MMSD Planetarium\, 201 South Gammon Road\, Madison\, WI\, 53717\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125116/ghostwars-tonehed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230124T211500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230114T212706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230118T213132Z
UID:16643-1674068400-1674594900@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Skinamarink at Marcus Point Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Kevin (Lucas Paul) sits on a carpeted floor facing a door in a darkened hallway. A plug-in nightlight glows to his right. \nStarting Thursday\, January 19\, “Skinamarink” also has show times at AMC Fitchburg. \nKyle Edward Ball’s Skinamarink (2022) has to be in contention for the most experimental 21st century feature to be given a wide release (and kudos to Shudder for giving a big push to such a not-for-everyone film). As with many of the most enduring horror movies\, Skinamarink is more about cultivating a vibe\, dispensing with all but the barest trappings of a plot\, which could theoretically be described as what’s happening on the other side of the TV in Poltergeist (1982). Or it can be seen as a deconstruction of cheaply made found-footage horror films like The Blair Witch Project (1999) and Paranormal Activity (2007) that have been lucrative since the advent of digital cameras\, scooping out facets of conventional narrative (analogous to what this bit does to stand-up comedy). \nSet in 1995\, Skinamarink essentially concerns young brother and sister\, Kevin (Lucas Paul) and Kaylee (Dali Rose Tetreault)\, who are lured through a door (that only sometimes exists) to a version of their house that doesn’t have their parents (Jamie Hill and Ross Paul) in it. The voice toys with them\, tries to placate them with public domain cartoons (proving that even mysterious supernatural beings fear copyright infringement suits)\, and eventually gives them violent instructions for some nefarious but undefined purpose. \nBut again\, just to emphasize the experimental nature of Ball’s approach: human faces only appear on screen a total of three times in the 100-minute runtime\, and for no more than a few seconds each time. Most of the dialogue is both hushed and distorted enough that subtitles are intermittently provided\, and the camera’s point of view is firmly the two siblings. The lens mostly points up and the large house around them\, filtered through a VHS grain that gives the swathes of black a distorted\, abstract quality that invites the viewer to mentally fill in something lurking in the darkness like a sinister version of Ken Jacobs’ The Movie That Invites Pausing (2020). If you’re prepared to bring your imagination to those dark corners\, you’ll certainly freak yourself out. \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/skinamarink-at-marcus-point-cinema/
LOCATION:Marcus Point Cinema\, 7825 Big Sky Drive\, Madison\, WI\, 53719\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125059/skinamarink-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230126T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230126T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230117T210156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230117T210156Z
UID:16647-1674759600-1674765000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:EO at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:In the grass beyond a ribbon-cutting ceremony\, Eo stands calmly with a garland of carrots around his mane\, a subtle nod to the canonized wreath of flowers from “Au Hasard Balthazar.” \nSeveral films in recent years have centered the emotional experiences and points of view of our fellow mammals—Viktor Kossakovsky’s Gunda (2020) and Andrea Arnold’s Cow (2021)\, to name a couple—but Jerzy Skolimowski’s EO (2022) is perhaps the first to render the life of one\, a donkey\, with the sort of psychological flair typically reserved for a human or at least a fully anthropomorphized computer rendering. \nBorrowing liberally from one of the all-time cinematic touchstones\, Robert Bresson’s Au Hasard Balthazar (1966)\, EO perseveres as a metaphysical and earthly narrative. Those disparate elements interact singularly throughout a tragic cross-country journey that begins at a Polish traveling circus where the titular donkey is adored by his ring-performance partner Kasandra (Sandra Drzymalska\, analogous to Anne Wiazemsky’s Marie in Balthazar). In a way\, EO unfolds as a love story with Shakespearean shades\, as the two are inevitably separated\, and Eo’s journey becomes one of silent reconciliation. Skolimowski and cinematographer Michał Dymek visually manifest Eo’s desire for Kasandra’s warmth that’s missing through all his wandering far and near\, her hands caressing his muzzle and mane. \nSkolimowski amplifies Bresson’s spiritual and religious Dostoyevsky parable with an urgent sociological angle. This is partly due to the setting in modern times\, but also how the film represents the contrived separations of our kind from innocent observer Eo through its use of hyperlinked vignettes. It trades tones and genres as Eo escapes or moves between places in scenes that persistently showcase the contrast between fluorescence and natural light\, recalling Terence Malick’s predilections. \nBut it would all be somehow incomplete without the dramatic heft of Paweł Mykietyn’s score\, which is almost instantaneously overwhelming—its weeping strings conjuring a certain narrative artifice of old Hollywood\, and at once establishing Eo’s migration as one that sways between melodrama and magical realism. Like Arnold’s Cow\, EO would seem to be outlying in Skolimowski’s filmography\, and yet it carries a distinctive line of romantic drama that he cultivated more than a half-century ago. EO is perhaps the sum of the director’s innermost conflicts that emerges as hope for a world where love is essential and cruelty is incidental. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/eo-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/2023/01/02125056/eofilm-hed.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230114T080911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232320Z
UID:16640-1674846000-1674853200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:The Good Boss at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:Blanco (Javier Bardem) smiles as he sits at a table in his office that overlooks the factory floor of Blanco Scales. \nIn Fernando León de Aranoa’s The Good Boss\, Blanco Scales is up for a regional business award. The owner (Javier Bardem) and the business that bears his name are one\, and he will stop at nothing to project the image of a benevolent\, civically minded pillar of the community. Manipulation\, intimidation\, bribery\, adultery\, and giving in to blackmail are all deemed necessary. \nBardem sports a shock of white hair reminiscent of his Skyfall (2012) antagonist Raoul Silva\, though Blanco is more practiced at hiding any potential villainous tendencies behind a smile\, a firm handshake\, and plenty of rhetoric about fairness and how his company is “like a family.” Of course\, he conveniently ignores both the rigid hierarchy implied by such a statement\, as well as the unique capacity family has to hurt and exploit its most vulnerable members\, as any manager who’s used that phrase does. \nCase in point: Miralles (Manolo Solo)\, Blanco’s shipping manager and childhood friend\, is continually ordering the wrong parts\, thus making it impossible for the factory to fulfill orders on time. Miralles confides in Blanco that he hasn’t been sleeping\, because he suspects his wife Aurora (Mara Guil) of cheating. Blanco takes it upon himself to ask her to stop the affair until at least the end of the week\, after the award inspection committee has stopped by. \nLeading up to the official inspection\, this is just one of many fires that Blanco tries to stomp out\, as he maintains his balance in a madcap comedy reminiscent of Billy Wilder’s One\, Two\, Three (1961). The Good Boss delivers laughs\, showing how far Blanco is willing to go to maintain the appearance of being upright while ultimately raising fair points about how modern capitalism has become more inclusive by giving the most craven of individuals the opportunity to rise by stepping on the necks of their fellow workers. \n—Lewis Peterson
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/the-good-boss-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/2023/01/02125059/thegoodboss-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230127T213000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230120T205610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232302Z
UID:16662-1674849600-1674855000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premieres at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27\, and continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230128T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230129T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230120T210051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232242Z
UID:16663-1674914400-1675006200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premiered at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27. It continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre-2/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230202T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230202T204000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230126T195639Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232228Z
UID:16687-1675364400-1675370400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Aftersun at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:Sophie (Frankie Corio) hugs her father (Paul Mescal) as they dance together on the last night of their vacation in Turkey. \nKids never really know their parents as people. Of course\, as one gets older\, it’s a nearly universal experience to collect bits and pieces of adulthood’s realities\, family secrets\, and an awareness of mortality that ultimately bring one closer to understanding a caretaker as human. But before that transformative coming-of-age symptom makes itself felt\, mothers and fathers tend to be figures filtered through the pristine eyes of childhood. \nCharlotte Wells’ astonishing directorial debut\, Aftersun (2022)\, explores how to reconcile those hazy\, naïve memories and beliefs of adolescence with the hardened knowledge of maturity brought on by loss and aging. The film follows both the 11- and 31-year old versions of Sophie Paterson (Frankie Corio and Celia Rowlson-Hall\, respectively) as she recalls a vacation to Turkey with her father\, Calum (Paul Mescal)\, in the early 2000s. The trip marked Calum’s 31st birthday and\, fatefully\, the last time Sophie ever saw him.  \nWells gives her audience the same tools to grasp Calum’s humanity as the two iterations of Sophie: footage from an old camcorder\, recollections of instances where Calum’s carefree façade crumbles\, and a rave-like liminal space that serves as a touchpoint for Sophie to attempt to reconnect with her younger self and a father she hasn’t seen in 20 years. With this framework—and a breathtaking performance by Mescal that just earned him an Academy Award nomination for best actor—Aftersun easily earns its place among the best films of last year\, most appropriately featured here in UW Cinematheque’s “Best Of 2022″ series. \n—Alisyn Amant
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/aftersun-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/2023/01/02125045/aftersunfilm-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230203T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230203T213000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230130T083406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232157Z
UID:16697-1675454400-1675459800@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premiered at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27. It continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre-3/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230204T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230204T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230130T083839Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232152Z
UID:16698-1675519200-1675524600@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Encore In Black And White at Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre
DESCRIPTION:A still from “Elephant In The Room” features three actors. Rikki Christman (right) points a toy gun at Joe Wahlers (left\, seated). James Burreson stands cloaked in the shadows near the center of the frame in front of a vintage coffee shop backdrop. \nEncore Studio For The Performing Arts celebrates their 23rd year as Wisconsin’s premier theater company for people with disabilities with a four-film\, 75-minute suite that pays homage to silent and early sound era cinema. “Encore In Black And White” premiered at the Mary DuPont Wahlers Theatre (just off of Fish Hatchery Road) on Friday night\, January 27. It continues across four additional days (January 28 and 29 at 2 p.m.\, February 3 at 8 p.m.\, and February 4 at 2 p.m.). Tickets are available directly through Encore as suggested donations of $15 per general patron\, and $5 for people with disabilities\, students\, and seniors. \nWorking with four different writers riffing on four archetypal genres from the dawn of modern cinema\, universal director Heather Renken has an exemplary opportunity under this program’s umbrella to exhibit her experience and insight with local actors\, not only in longstanding connections to Encore Studio (serving as artistic associate for over a decade)\, but with Broom Street Theater and Children’s Theater Of Madison as well. \nRenken contributed on the writing side to the third short\, a colorful spin on noir tropes titled Elephant In The Room. In her recent interview with Channel 3000‘s Doug Moe\, Renken graciously cites Encore actor James Burreson’s passion for detective stories as the catalyst to its realization. \nOther screenwriters who helped bring “Encore In Black In White” to fruition include Clarice Lafayette\, who wrote the zippy piece of horror that opens the night\, Redemption. Sarah Jo Schoenhaar’s take on century-old slapstick emerges in Bona Fide\, and KelsyAnne Schoenhaar’s witty musical comedy of To Heiress Human closes the screening event on a spirited note (literally). Stick around afterward for a Q&A with the cast and crew. \n—Grant Phipps
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/encore-in-black-and-white-at-mary-dupont-wahlers-theatre-4/
LOCATION:Mary Dupont Wahlers Theatre\, 1480 Martin St\, Madison\, WI\, 53713\, United States
CATEGORIES:Culture,Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/02125054/encore-elephantintheroom.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230204T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230204T205000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230128T050622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232142Z
UID:16695-1675533600-1675543800@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Big Brown Eyes & Hot Saturday at UW Cinematheque
DESCRIPTION:In “Big Brown Eyes\,” Eve Fallon (Joan Bennett) hands detective Danny Barr (Cary Grant) his gun back. \nSophisticated and handsome but not afraid to get silly\, Cary Grant was one of Hollywood’s most beloved leading men. Before he became synonymous with Hitchcock thrillers and madcap romantic comedies\, he came up through Hollywood in the 1930s; and you can catch a 35mm double feature of Grant’s early starring roles at UW Cinematheque this Saturday starting at 6 p.m. \nPlayfully blending film noir and dialogue-driven comedy\, Big Brown Eyes (1936) features Grant and Joan Bennett as a police detective and his manicurist-turned-reporter girlfriend who’s trying to catch a gang of murderous jewel thieves. With its pulpy plot punctuated by Grant and Bennett trading rapid-fire wisecracks\, Big Brown Eyes is a charming warm-up for the screwball comedies Grant would make over the next few years. Director Raoul Walsh worked in seemingly every genre during his long career\, and he deftly balances the hard-boiled crime elements with colorful characters and snappy banter. \nA racy pre-Code romance with surprising sexual politics\, Hot Saturday (1932) stars Nancy Carroll as Ruth Brock\, a small-town bank teller who lives for weekend parties with her friends. Despite the drunken escapades\, Ruth has maintained her reputation\, but a rebuffed date decides to teach her a lesson by spreading a rumor about Ruth and big-city playboy Romer Sheffield (Grant). Ruth is branded a promiscuous hussy and loses her job overnight due to “loose morals.” Desperate to preserve her honor\, Ruth convinces her recently returned childhood flame Bill Fadden (Western regular Randolph Scott) to propose to her\, but finds the malicious gossip hard to escape. \nWhen William A. Seiter directed Hot Saturday\, Hollywood was increasingly under attack by conservative rural America\, who were outraged by the titillating films supposedly corrupting their youth. It’s easy to view the film as a rebuke of small-town America’s supposed moral high ground—Hot Saturday’s town of Marysville is populated by scowling\, puritanical gossips and their depraved\, horny sons. Compared to the yokels Ruth hangs out with\, Romer is a catch. Dressed in a white suit\, Grant portrays him as an urbane\, charming rogue\, a preface to the many redeemable cads he’d play later in life. \n—Ian Adcock
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/big-brown-eyes-hot-saturday-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/2023/01/02125041/bigbrowneyesfilm-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230212T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230212T223000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230206T155059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232114Z
UID:16734-1676232000-1676241000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Inside A Dream: The Music Of David Lynch at High Noon Saloon
DESCRIPTION:Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee) of “Twin Peaks” screams nightmarishly at the center of a surreal black-and-white collage. \n“It was a dream! We live inside a dream!” exclaims Phillip Jeffries\, the disturbed\, long-lost FBI Special Agent portrayed by David Bowie in David Lynch’s 1992 film Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me. Jeffries inexplicably materializes in the Philadelphia FBI office and delivers a rambling\, incoherent speech\, only to mysteriously vanish once again as he did years ago on assignment in Argentina. \nInside A Dream: The Music of David Lynch\, a live tribute to the iconic surrealist filmmaker\, comes to the High Noon Saloon this Sunday. The show borrows its title from this bizarre scene\, while aiming to reproduce the otherworldly atmosphere of Lynch’s oeuvre. Featuring an eight-piece band that consists of talented musicians from Milwaukee and guest vocalist Kenzi Rayelle\, the project derives inspiration from all of Lynch’s work to present a unique multimedia experience. Aidan White\, Nicolas Buendia\, David Brady\, Paul Westfahl\, Allen Russell\, Ousia Moon\, Troy Leisemann\, and Luis Solis-Trinidad will all be performing live versions of songs and scores featured in Eraserhead\, Blue Velvet\, Mulholland Dr.\, Inland Empire\, and more\, along with “deconstructed” Twin Peaks Red Room stage design and projected visual accompaniment. \nInside A Dream was created by White\, a self-described “crazed Lynch fan.” In a 2022 interview for Milwaukee Record\, he says\, “Lynch is an incredibly visual director and is a craftsman at creating abstract stories\, but in my opinion the music he constructs for his work is just as iconic as the stories themselves.” (It should be noted that composer Angelo Badalamenti collaborated extensively with Lynch on the music for his films\, and so this is as much a celebration of him as Lynch.) \nWhile this marks the show’s third installment\, it is the debut performance in Madison. As for what to expect\, in the words of FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLachlan)\, the eccentric protagonist of Twin Peaks: “I have no idea where this will lead us\, but I have a definite feeling it will be a place both wonderful and strange.” \n—Jason Fuhrman
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/inside-a-dream-the-music-of-david-lynch-at-high-noon-saloon/
LOCATION:High Noon Saloon\, 701 East Washington Avenue\, Madison\, WI\, 53703\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/02125028/insideadream-lynchshow.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230213T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230213T223000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230208T000550Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230208T002104Z
UID:16761-1676316600-1676327400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Decision To Leave at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:After a long night spent in the interrogation room\, Detective Hae-jun (Park Hae-il) offers Seo-rae (Tang Wei) a toothbrush to clean out some of the sushi they shared together. \nExcerpt from Alisyn Amant’s October 2022 review: \nGiven director Park Chan-wook’s propensity to subvert conventions of the mystery genre throughout his career\, however\, it makes sense that Decision To Leave follows its predecessors’ sensibilities. That is\, murder becomes the least mysterious part about the narrative he spins. Rather\, viewers will instead need to shift their focus on figuring out the tortuous tension between detective Hae-jun (Park Hae-il) and enigmatic widow Seo-rae (Tang Wei). \nThrough twitches of an eye or subtle movements of an arm\, Park Hae-il and Tang’s performances both succeed in saying what their director’s dialogue refuses to say outright\, for the sake of making viewers work for the answers. Tang’s performance as the seductive suspect\, who happens to be a Chinese immigrant facing intense discrimination and abuse within imbalanced marriages\, could have easily become another face to add to the annals of the “conniving but helpless woman” trope. Instead\, she molds an intensely emotional character that purposely rubs up against patriarchal power—what law enforcement agencies tend to represent in film and other art forms. When Seo-rae is questioned further about her role in her husband’s death\, she essentially and antagonistically asks\, “Shouldn’t you be pitying me because I’m a woman?” It shapes the idea that Decision To Leave is not just another cat-and-mouse thriller\, but a chilling romance of true equals. \nA 25-minute video conversation between Park Chan-wook and fellow South Korean director Bong Joon-ho will also follow this Marquee screening.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/decision-to-leave-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/2022/10/02125317/decisiontoleave-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230216T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230216T230000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230203T162112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230203T165427Z
UID:16728-1676577600-1676588400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Disaster Passport ("Koyaanisqatsi" screening with live score)\, Faux Fawn at Bur Oak
DESCRIPTION:Madison band Disaster Passport has built up a dedicated local following by doing something that looks downright absurd in theory: writing its own score to a film (Koyaanisqatsi) that already has a score (by Philip Glass)—one so iconic that it’s hard to separate the music from the core experience. Back in 2018\, the four-piece began playing live shows accompanying Godfrey Reggio’s experimental 1982 docu-portrait of a world barreling toward environmental collapse. \nRather than re-interpreting the towering choral themes and kinetic orchestration of Glass’ original score\, or even particularly taking cues from it\, Disaster Passport started from scratch. Banjos (Andy Moore and Colin Crowley)\, baritone guitar (Karl Christenson of Cribshitter)\, drums\, and loops (both from Luke Bassuener of Asumaya) offer viewers a more rambling\, ruminative path into the film. (Full disclosure: Moore is a Tone Madison contributor.) \nReggio’s editing style moves Koyaanisqatsi along at a nimble and at times fevered pace. Sure\, it was initially intended to go along with Glass’ music—but when a film is so packed with rhythmic cues and powerful\, wordless messages\, why shouldn’t other musicians offer a different kind of interplay entirely? Disaster Passport composed the score over the course of eight months\, but audiences can hear improvisational elements evolve and shift from one performance to the next\, as the musicians respond to  the film’s rich layers. \nAt this show\, Stoughton-based singer-songwriter Paul Otteson and his band Faux Fawn will open things up. Expect a set of tender\, poignant folk songs with their own kind of cinematic scope. \n—Scott Gordon \nScore by Disaster Passport \nPhoto by Audre Rae Photography.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/disaster-passport-koyaanisqatsi-screening-with-live-score-faux-fawn-at-bur-oak/
LOCATION:Bur Oak\, 2262 Winnebago St\, Madison\, WI\, 53704\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film,Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/02125031/disasterpassport_header.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230219T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230219T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230215T191059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T232100Z
UID:16809-1676815200-1676820600@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Remembering Paolo Gioli at Chazen Museum Of Art
DESCRIPTION:A photo of Caroline Kennedy as a child is layered with an image of a child wounded during the Vietnam War in Paolo Gioli’s “Children” (2008). \nFilmmaker Paolo Gioli (1942-2022) may not be a common reference for the movement of structural cinema. But his diverse and consistent body of work\, stretching from the late 1960s to the 2010s\, is a rich and varied exploration of celluloid that often asks the viewer to reconsider the mechanics of their own seeing. In observance of Gioli’s death in 2022\, the UW Cinematheque is hosting a career-spanning short film program of his work at the Chazen Museum Of Art\, which will be introduced by UW-Madison professor Patrick Rumble\, arguably the leading scholar on Gioli.  \nThe eight-film program begins with Traces Of Traces (1969)\, an animated film made with varied materials including the oil impressions from his own skin. As Gioli’s first film\, it is more deliberately abstract than many of his others\, exploring an on-cell animation style most commonly seen in Stan Brakhage’s films. Line patterns move between dense cross-hatches and looser\, globular forms. \nThe remainder of the program includes Gioli’s many experiments with found footage\, including Children (2008) which juxtaposes images of the privileged Kennedy family with photos of war-torn Vietnam\, as well as Faces Of An Unknown Photographer (2009)\, which mines the collection of an anonymous early 20th-century photographer to re-photograph the materials and create dense superimpositions at different shutter speeds. \nThis ability to study and recreate old work with new methods runs through Gioli’s filmography; he uses the medium to rediscover and reanimate lost materials\, and does this most extensively in Little Decomposed Film (1986) with a series of motion studies that echo Eadweard Muybridge’s pioneering work. Borrowing only printed images from textbooks\, Gioli stitches together a series of short animations\, each simulating motion from as few as two or three still images with stroboscopic imaging and flicker effects. The dazzling effect calls the viewer’s attention to how\, and at what exact point\, we feel like we’ve seen a “moving” image. \nIf Gioli’s work possesses a psychotropic effect\, it’s a self-aware interrogation of the act of seeing itself. Face Caught In The Dark (1995) most evocatively achieves this as a piece similarly made from the leftover materials of a long-gone photographer. Here\, Gioli photographs the portrait photographer’s leftover glass plates (a pre-film era way to capture an image impression) and sequences them in a ghostly montage. Each thin impression is barely legible as a face on its own. Shots accumulate as a sort of all-face\, like watching a granular prototype of the now-ubiquitous face-generating AI. It’s an eerie effect\, and one that brings our awareness not only to the act of seeing but to film’s ability to trans-historically reanimate. \nIf all of this sounds heady and Frankensteinian\, the program also includes the palette-cleanser Natura Obscura (2013)\, one of Gioli’s most purely beautiful films. Using a “pinhole” style (shooting through a tube pin-pricked with small holes)\, Gioli reduces the frame and surrounds it with tiny streams of light. The experimentation feels most jubilant. Each image is covered in a staticky halo with the clear footage at the center of the frame like the tip of a sparkler. \nIn a varied career that restores meaning to the filmic term of “experimental\,” Gioli’s restless innovation made him a consistently interesting\, if not widely known\, filmmaker. His work reminds us that even the most conceptual work can have a potent psychological effect. \n—Maxwell Courtright
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/remembering-paolo-gioli-at-chazen-museum-of-art/
LOCATION:Chazen Museum Of Art\, 800 University Ave\, Madison\, WI\, 53706\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/02125007/children-gioli.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T213000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T234500
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230217T054124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230622T231951Z
UID:16812-1677274200-1677282300@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Thirst (2009) at Union South Marquee
DESCRIPTION:In a white room\, Tae-Ju (Kim Ok-bin) feeds on an unsuspecting victim while her paralyzed mother-in-law (Kim Hae-sook) watches. \nBlending eroticism\, horror\, and black comedy\, Thirst (2009) is a twist-filled take on the vampire genre from South Korean director Park Chan-wook. Much like his recent Decision To Leave (2022)\, Park packs his thematic obsessions and ambitious visual style into a hallucinatory tale of doomed love. \nSuffering from a crisis of faith\, Catholic priest Sang-Hyun (Song Kang-ho) volunteers for a medical experiment in an effort to find a cure for a deadly virus. Miraculously surviving thanks to a blood transfusion\, Sang-Hyun becomes a faith-healer figure\, but he begins to experience mysterious symptoms—heightened senses\, carnal urges\, and an allergy to sunlight—that can only be eased by drinking human blood. \nLeaving the church\, Sang-Hyun begins a smoldering affair with Tae-Ju (Kim Ok-bin)\, the wife of a childhood friend. When Tae-Ju convinces him to murder her husband and turn her into a vampire\, the lovers find themselves in a hell of their own making\, tormented by guilt\, deception\, and the ghost of her husband. \nAvoiding the gothic genre trappings\, Park instead draws from his Catholic upbringing and Émile Zola’s novel Thérèse Raquin as source material. A halfway point between Park’s breakout Vengeance Trilogy (2002-2005) and his later\, more psychological works like The Handmaiden (2016)\, Thirst at times feels overstuffed with ideas. But it remains brimming with Park’s signature\, dazzling visuals\, tonal shifts\, and shocking violence. The film verges dramatically between blood-soaked supernatural horror\, torrid romance\, and moments of unexpected slapstick. Audacious and excessive\, it’s a bold genre experiment from one of modern cinema’s most idiosyncratic minds. \n—Ian Adcock
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/thirst-2009-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/2023/02/02125003/thirst2009-hed.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230303T213000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230308T195000
DTSTAMP:20260404T121910
CREATED:20230301T030050Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230301T030050Z
UID:16878-1677879000-1678305000@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:RRR at Marcus Point Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Rama Raju (Ram Charan) and Komaram Bheem (NTR Jr.) smile while in the midst of a choreographed dance move. \nNo prior knowledge of Indian historical figures Alluri Sitarama Raju and Komaram Bheem is necessary to appreciate as S.S. Rajamouli’s bombastic action film RRR (2022). This three-hour epic reimagines the two real life anti-Raj activists Bheem (N.T. Rama Rao Jr.\, often referred to as NTR Jr.) and Rama Raju (Ram Charan) as near-superhuman strongmen\, an analogue to Goku and Vegeta for 1920s India. It’s returning to theaters for just shy of a week\, on the strength of an Oscar nomination for best song and Rajamouli’s hobnobbing with the likes of James Cameron and Steven Spielberg since the film’s initial release last year. \nRajamouli’s infectious enthusiasm for over-the-top action set pieces have led to RRR becoming a crossover hit with audiences who aren’t usually tuned in to Indian cinema\, both in America and worldwide. (Of course\, having the highest production budget of any Indian film to date surely has something to do with it.) \nThe plot in brief: Bheem hopes to rescue a kidnapped child from cartoonishly evil British Colonialists. Rama Raju works for the British police. Both go undercover\, and the men become best friends without ever realizing each other’s true identity. Tension dramatically comes to head after the requisite dance number. \nRajamouli is clearly having a blast staging CGI-heavy action. Among 2022 action movies\, only Top Gun: Maverick‘s plane scenes come anywhere close to RRR’s level of excitement\, and the Indian production didn’t have to utilize taxpayer-funded fighter jets to do it. (That is not to say RRR doesn’t have its own problematic implications.) But at the end of the day\, it’s a giant spectacle that highlights the strengths of the theatrical experience. So please take the chance to see this film big and loud. \n—Lewis Peterson \n \nThis preview was slightly modified and republished from last September for this special re-release event.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/rrr-at-marcus-point-cinema/
LOCATION:Marcus Point Cinema\, 7825 Big Sky Drive\, Madison\, WI\, 53719\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://d3hccd6dowbbba.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/02124946/rrr-event.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR