Warren Sonbert Films Screening in Paris Tribute to the "New York Underground"

Warren Sonbert Films Screening in Paris Tribute to the New York Underground
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Warren Sonbert Films Screening in 
Paris Tribute to the New York Underground
 
 
Warren Sonbert
Warren Sonbert with his film camera

 



Two of Warren Sonbert's films, Amphetamine and Where Did Our Love Go? will be shown in the retrospective "New York Underground" organized by Documentaire sur grand écran, as part of a tribute to Bleecker Street Cinema.  Both films are screening in Paris at the Filmothèque du Quartier Latin on Saturday evening, November 23.
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

Beginning at age 15, Warren Sonbert, a Brooklyn native, regularly attended screenings at the Bleecker Street cinema.  He became friendly with the management, and, in 1965, at age 16 (!) he served as Editor-in-Chief of a special edition of New York Film Bulletin  on Jean-Luc Godard.  This magazine was regularly edited in the basement of the Bleecker Street Cinema, and this issue (number forty-six) already reveals Sonbert's precocious genius and deep appreciation of the voice of the cinematic auteur, as revealed in his one-on-one interview with Godard:

 

 

"WS:  In Truffaut's La Peau Douce various banal objects (telephones, lights, shoes) play a significant role.  Is there any similarity in the continual presence of spherical objects and motions in Bande a Part?

 

J-LG:  No, all that was accidental.  But you know, now that I think of it, what you said about round objects often seen in Bande a Part: the last shot is of the world which is round, you know - so maybe you're right."

 

 

 

 AMPHETAMINE (1966)

 

 

 

In February 1966, as a filmmaking student at New York University, Sonbert shot his first film (with Wendy Appel), entitled Amphetamine, about which he wrote, "First film, heavily influenced by Godard and Warhol - designed to shock".  His next movie, Where Did Our Love Go?, is, according to film critic James Stoller, "both a valentine and a farewell to a generation".

 

 

 

 WHERE DID OUR LOVE GO? (1966)

 

 

 

Warren Sonbert subsequently showed his films at Bleecker Street cinema.  Where Did Our Love Go? contains the only known footage of the interior of this movie theater during the period that it was founded and owned by Lionel Rogosin. Before he turned 21, Sonbert also secured a complete retrospective showing of his films at The Film-Makers' Cinematheque; the film critic for Variety wrote: 

 

"Probably not since Andy Warhol's 'The Chelsea Girls' had its first showing at the Cinematheque...almost a year and a half ago has an 'underground' film event caused as much curiosity and interest in N.Y's non-underground world as did four days of showings of the complete films of Warren Sonbert at the Cinematheque's new location on Wooster St. last weekend (Thurs. - Sun. Jan 25-28).  And as before, the crowds (many turned away each night) were attributed to press reports."

 

 

 

For a trailer of the "New York Underground" retrospective,
featuring filmmaker Warren Sonbert, click here.
For full program information, click here.

 

 

 

For more information about Warren Sonbert &
an international touring retrospective of his films,
click here,
or contact: 
info@gartenbergmedia.com.

 

 

 



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GME Announces FRENCH MASTERWORKS & THE RED LANTERN on DVD Available for Institutional Sales

GME Announces FRENCH MASTERWORKS & THE RED LANTERN on DVD Available for Institutional Sales
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Gartenberg Media Announces

2 Major DVD Publications from the Silent Film Era

  

FRENCH MASTERWORKS: RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉS IN PARIS 1923-1929  

&  

THE RED LANTERN(1919)

Both Now Available on DVD for Institutional Sales

 

Gartenberg Media Enterprises (GME) is proud to announce the release of FRENCH MASTERWORKS: RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉS IN PARIS 1923-1929, a 5-Disc DVD Deluxe Edition from Flicker Alley, as well as THE RED LANTERN, published by Cinematek, as a PAL-DVD with an accompanying 208-page softcover book. Both DVD editions are available for institutional sales in North America.
 

 

The collection of Russian filmmakers who made up the core of what came to be known as Films Albatros arrived from Moscow after the October 1917 revolution by way of Yalta, Constantinople and Marseilles, establishing their base of operations in an old Pathé greenhouse-style studio in the Paris suburb of Montreuil.  From it flowed some of the finest French films of the 1920s - variously experimental, spectacular, charming, witty; and always beautifully executed.  FRENCH MASTERWORKS: RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉS IN PARIS 1923-1929 presents five exciting silent cinema features, each restored to excellent condition by the Cinematheque Francaise, and accompanied by outstanding new music scores by Timothy Brock, Robert Israel, Neil Brand, Antonio Coppola and the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra.  For each film, the original French titles are retained with optional English subtitles.

 

 

 FRENCH MASTERWORKS: RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉS IN PARIS 1923-1929  

Five Iconic Films Albatros Productions

5 Disc DVD Collection

LE BRASIER ARGENT  Ivan Mosjoukine  (1923)   

KEAN  Alexandre Volkoff  (1924)   

FEU MATHIAS PASCAL  Marcel L'Herbier  (1926)   

GRIBICHE  Jacques Feyder  (1926)   

LES NOUVEAUX MESSIEUR  Jacques Feyder  (1929) 

 

DVD-NTSC - Region 0 / 
No Regional Code.

 

  Institutional Sale Price: $ 400.00 plus shipping & handling.

 


FRENCH MASTERWORKS      THE RED LANTERN


  

THE RED LANTERN tells the story of a Eurasian, Joan of Arc-like heroine, set against the background of China's 1900 Boxer Rebellion. The film was an instant success, thanks to the star qualities of diva Alla Nazimova and an unprecedented advertising campaign ("Presenting The Greatest Actress of the Day, NAZIMOVA, The Star of a Thousand Moods".) Both these aspects are extensively discussed in the accompanying publication, To Dazzle the Eye and Stir the Heart - The Red Lantern, Nazimova and the Boxer Rebellion. Additional essays examine the literary origin of the film (The Red Lantern by Edith Wherry) as well as the historical impact of the Boxer Rebellion, that inform the larger issues of biracial identity, feminism, nationalism, and the clash of cultures that are portrayed in Capellani's film. Bonus features on the DVD include early cinema actualities that evoke the way in which the Boxer Rebellion was portrayed in Western society around the turn of the century, reconstruction of a Chinese screening programme from the time of the film's premiere in the United States, as well as screen tests and odes to the film's star, Nazimova. 

 

 

Albert Capellani
USA  (1919)

 To Dazzle the Eye and Stir the Heart -
The Red Lantern, Nazimova and the Boxer Rebellion
 

208-page Softcover book.


 DVD-PAL - Region 0 /
No Regional Code.


Institutional Sale Price: $ 200.00 plus shipping & handling.

 

  

 

 

Watch for our Next DVD Release Newsletter

 

Coming Soon!

 

 

For our entire DVD catalogue, please visit:  www.gartenbergmedia.com/dvd/

 

For inquiries and to order by e-mail, contact:  sales@gartenbergmedia.com

 

Order by Phone @ 212.280.8654 or by Fax @ 212.280.8656

 

Please Note:

Many of our DVDs are published in PAL format Region 0.

PAL DVDs require a PAL or Multi-system DVD player for playback.

 

These DVD and Blu-ray editions are currently being made available to

universities, libraries, museums, and other educational organizations in North

America (US and Canada), and include public performance rights. Public

performance rights extend to use in classrooms and other non-commercial

settings where no admission is charged.

 

 



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THE CURTIS HARRINGTON SHORT FILM COLLECTION - Blu-ray/DVD Combo Set Available for Institutional Sales

GME Announces THE CURTIS HARRINGTON SHORT FILM COLLECTION - Blu-ray/DVD Combo Set Available for Institutional Sales
GME Logo
Gartenberg Media Announces

  

THE CURTIS HARRINGTON SHORT FILM COLLECTION 

 

 

Deluxe Blu-ray/DVD Combo Available for Institutional Sales

 

 

Gartenberg Media Enterprises (GME) is proud to announce the release of THE CURTIS HARRINGTON SHORT FILM COLLECTION, a Deluxe Dual-Disc Combo Blu-ray/DVD Edition published by Flicker Alley, now available for institutional sales in North America. 

 

Curtis Harrington, widely regarded as one of the important avant-garde directors of the 1940's, as well as an early influential figure in what would come to be known as 'New Queer Cinema,' was born in Los Angeles in 1926. He began making films as a teenager, often deeply surreal, intuitive, and owing much to the writings of Edgar Allan Poe.  After graduating from UCLA with a degree in film studies, his unique career trajectory led him from the academic circles of cinematic criticism (he wrote a publication on the films of Josef von Sternberg); to the Hollywood assistant desk of writer/producer Jerry Wald; to the elite group of independent filmmakers associated with Kenneth Anger (the two remained life-long friends and colleagues); to the famed film factory of cult icon Roger Corman; then on to his own stint in the world of genre movie-making with NIGHT TIDE (1961) and GAMES (1967); and most unpredictable of all, to finding commercial success in television.  This publication, a joint effort between Flicker Alley and Drag City featuring restorations carried out by the Academy Film Archive on a dual-disc Blu-ray/DVD combo, comprised of six short films by the late experimental filmmaker, as well as bonus interview footage and rarely-seen early works. 

 

Curtis Harrington Short Film Collection


The films:

FRAGMENTS OF SEEKING (1946, 16 mins.)  Harrington plays a young man desperately seeking out the fleeting image of a female companion, and though he never quite catches her, he discovers much more through the surreal explorations of his own sexuality.  Made a year before Kenneth Anger's FIREWORKS, the films contain some similarities in their treatment of homoerotic themes, though Fragment is more restrained and subtle.

 

PICNIC (1948, 22 mins.)  Beginning in the reality of American middle-class life, PICNIC portrays the idealistic dream-quest of the protagonist, from which he is finally cast off.  Harrington himself described the film thus: "a satirical comment on middle-class life frames a dream-like continuity in which the protagonist pursues an illusory object of desire."

 

ON THE EDGE (1949, 6 mins.)  In this fragile, yet frightening poetic fantasy, set against a dark industrial landscape, Harrington casts his own mother and father in the lead roles.

 

THE ASSIGNATION (1953, 8 mins.)  Long considered lost, this was Harrington's first color film. It was shot in Venice, Italy, and not unlike FRAGMENTS OF SEEKING, follows a masked figure through the labyrinthine canals of the city, building to a spectacular climax.

 

THE WORMWOOD STAR (1955, 10 mins.)  A film study of the artwork of famed painter, occultist and Alistair Crowley-enthusiast Majorie Cameron.  Cameron went on to star in Harrington's feature-length NIGHT TIDE.  It is by far one of his most visually arresting works.

 

USHER (2002, 38 mins.)  Harrington's final film before he died in 2007, Usher is a remake of a short he made in high school based on the classic Edgar Allan Poe story "The Fall of the House of Usher."  He once again expresses his interest in the occult by casting known members of the Church of Satan, Nikolas and Zeena Schreck.

 

Also included are four rare bonus features

THE FOUR ELEMENTS (1966) is a poetic and avant-garde documentary Harrington made for the United States Information Agency;  
THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER (1942) is the original film-made by Harrington when was in high school-from which Usher is based;  
A short interview shot by filmmakers Tyler Hubby and Jeffrey Schwarz, who are responsible for the documentary HOUSE OF HARRINGTON (2009); 
And a 2003 interview with Harrington made courtesy of the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles. 
 
An enclosed booklet contains notes on the films' restorations by Academy Film Archive preservationist Mark Toscano and an essay by Lisa Janssen.
 
Running Time: 124 minutes.
 

Deluxe Combo Blu-ray/DVD Edition

            

Blu-ray Disc - Region A. 


 DVD-NTSC - Region 0 /
No Regional Code.


Institutional Sale Price: $ 200.00 plus shipping & handling.

 

  

 

 

Watch for our Next DVD Release Newsletter

 

Coming Soon!

 

 

For our entire DVD catalogue, please visit:  www.gartenbergmedia.com/dvd/

 

For inquiries and to order by e-mail, contact:  sales@gartenbergmedia.com

 

Order by Phone @ 212.280.8654 or by Fax @ 212.280.8656

 

Please Note:

Many of our DVDs are published in PAL format Region 0.

PAL DVDs require a PAL or Multi-system DVD player for playback.

 

These DVD and Blu-ray editions are currently being made available to

universities, libraries, museums, and other educational organizations in North

America (US and Canada), and include public performance rights. Public

performance rights extend to use in classrooms and other non-commercial

settings where no admission is charged.

 

 



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