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Cinejoy, March 2023 - Hundreds of Beavers

3/3/2023

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I have lived in the Santa Cruz mountains of Northern California for almost nine years. 

The mountains are a strange place. They draw you in and somehow change you. When you look the first time, you kinda see it, but like the proverbial frog in the proverbial pot, you sink in as it gets weirder around you. All that may be why I became so engrossed by Hundreds of Beavers, arguably the single-most avant garde feature I've seen in years. 

The premise is this: an applejack salesman, Jean Kayak (played by the amazing and long-named Ryland Brickson Cole Tews), sees his entire operation blow-up, and thus he is set to a new path, becoming a fur trapper. He takes on the creatures of the forest in a life-or-death battle, and sets about fulfilling a quest, Well, a couple of quests. It's very much structured like a video game, complete with side-quests and map-cuts. This is a structure that a lot of science fiction and fantasy films have taken in recent years, but this doesn't seem to play in those fields at the same time as being exactly in that space. 

And in that realm lies its brilliance. 

The look of the film is black-and-white, high-contrast/concept. The work they did with backgrounds is amazing, and it turns the film into a wonderland. Immediately I came to the sensation of Guy Maddin's The Saddest Music in the World, or even more closely, Night Mayor. It's not just the black-and-white, but the use of the contrast to bring us in to a place that is either charming or disquieting, usually in equal measure. The setting's non-reality is key to the marvel of the film because it plays in a universe that is almost exactly the same as Bugs Bunny and his ilk inhabit. 

The lack of almost any dialogue ramps it up, especially when we get the sound of blubbering tears or screams. The atmospheric sound seems a natural encounter, and the breaking of it to be a transgresion. This ties it to the silents in a much more real way than The Artist managed. They both feel like silent films, but here, they're working with the idea and tropes and when they do give us intentional words/utterances, they mean something. The sound design is so smart, minimalist, full of nuance, but precise. 

The action is both surreal and comical, like in Looney Toons. The way everything is presented is with a sense that Jean is unbreakable, an unkillable machine bent on taking out his terrible fur-covered foes, but he is surrounded by death... or at least the kind of death that is represented by 'X's across the eyes and drag-marks across the snow. Here, we are given a slapstick reality that plays in the unreal as much as a Mario Bros. game, but the stakes are actually there. 

In Hundreds of Beavers, we get little things that add up. A great bit of physical acting, when Jean nearly goes eye-first into a stump that has been beaver-gnawed into a stake-like death device, is just one of dozens of Harold Lloyd or Buster Keaton-worthy pieces of physical comedy. The cinematography amps everything up, and there are times I'm biting my nails like I would watching Safety Last at The Stanford. 

The fun bit is that every animal is a giant, fur-suited human. This is the closest it ties to the cartoon world. They're big, and they have so many human attributes that play off that size. This makes Jean's hunt for beaver into a great big comedy treasure hunt that finds more and more with every turn of the spade. 

This is one of the finest pieces of truly unique cinema you'll ever see. It builds beautifully, it never pauses too long to let the air out of the audience, nor moves too quickly so that nothing lands. That sweet-spot is something that many films, especially surrealist films, miss. 

You might remember a short film I talked about obsessively years ago: ‘Lullaby for Lucious & Sumat’ by Alvin Campana. The connections between the two feel deep: the use of large furry characters, puppetry (and the fish in this one are AWESOME!) the idea that the world is different in ways we both do and don't understand, and most importantly, the way that the setting falls somewhere between Magical Realism and Deep Fantasy, like Dali fighting Borges with Philip K. Dick as the ref. 

You really should set aside the time to give Hundreds of Beavers  watch. It's one of those viewing experiences that you will absolutely cherish. 

You can see Hundreds of Beavers as a part of CineJoy through March 12th.
 https://creatics.org/create/cinejoy/showcase/moviepage/267118/Hundreds-of-Beavers
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Cinejoy March 2023 - SHARE? by Ira Rosensweig

3/2/2023

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Summary 
SHARE? is a fantastic new feature from Ira Rosensweig. The amazing thing is that there is one single camera position, but it’s also incredibly dynamic. There are a lot of picture-in-picture going on, and that allows us to experience the world of the various captives. 



SHARE? by Ira Rosensweig

The history of cinema may seem to be about the fluidity of the camera. Starting in the 1910s, we saw movement of cameras through space to allow for greater exploration of the scene. This idea evolved rather slowly, but eventually things accelerated with the 1990s and 2000s making handheld camerawork very much the norm in many areas of film, especially in genre. Even filmmakers who had been long champions of the lock-down camera, like Kevin Smith and Jim Jarmusch, have gone all glidey. When we encounter a film that doesn’t play in those fields, we can be jarred by it.  
Then again, it also can allow for a stage that is a powerful platform for all sorts of performance.  
This latter is best exemplified by SHARE?, the fantastic new feature from Ira Rosensweig.  
This is a science fiction story that brought my mind immediately to a classic E.M. Forster story The Machine Stops. We open with a single man, alone, in a sparsely decorated room. He can interact with a screen using the green text that marked old computers. Eventually, he finds that he’s able to access a video-based network that allows others who are trapped (and perhaps others...) to view and communicate with one another. By producing content, they are able to earn credits towards materials for their cells.  
You can certainly see almost immediately the parallel between the SHARE? Universe and the TikTok universe, no?  
The amazing thing is that there is one single camera position, but it’s also incredibly dynamic. Yes, each of the rooms are shot from the exact same set-up, but the rooms are different, and more importantly, there’s the variety of stuff on-screen. There is a lot of picture-in-picture going on, and that allows us to experience the world of the various captives. Well, the inverted world of the captives. There’s near-constant text on the side of the screen, with data about their available funds or commands, the most important of which being ‘SHARE?’ 
This kind of film is a risk. You have to have a magnetic cast who, in essence, become your movement. The lead, Melvin Gregg, is fantastic, and Bradley Whitford, he of The West Wing and Jake’s dad on Brooklyn 99, is absolutely perfect for the role as a mentor/obnoxious jerk with a heart of slightly-less-than-gold, perhaps.

Alice Braga, though, is an absolute revelation.
She is great as the one who questions the entire system, and is eventually won over, in a way, while still maintaining her paranoia, and something akin to idealism. She is an ideal science fiction
actress, as she makes herself real at the same time as realistically interacting with the non-reality of the world she finds herself in. Everyone is great, but she’s an absolute marvel. When she gives herself over to the world she finds herself trapped in, she turns the entire piece into something more and more fascinating. And when she turns from that, it carries even more power.

The ultimate message of the piece is likely summed up in a single line: “Overall, we’re kept comfortable and distracted.” 
If there is a better phrase to sum-up the world of today, and especially the influencer/TikToker/Instalebrity/OnlyFans world, I don’t know what it is.  
This is an absolute masterpiece of a thought-experiment. Sadly, most thought experiments end up being far too deep into themselves, but this one, this is not that at all. It’s fascinating, and dynamic. We can find elements of people we are acutely aware of in our social media feeds. I did a bit of a look: one of the screens we see for a period is exactly my TikTok friend Tom, another is absolutely a dead-ringer presentation-wise for my Instagram friend Lisa. The performances feel like performances, at times, and while I would sometimes complain that would make the piece feel theater-y, it is actually far more realistic in the way those captives interact with the system, because it is EXACTLY how we interact with the systems we’ve found to keep ourselves distracted and comfortable. You can tell that it’s a choice, especially from Gregg and Danielle Campbell. They give great performances that demand you delve in deeper with every second they are on screen.  
There are so many other messages here as well. There is a simple one about group dynamics, about leaders and the prices they pay, or have extracted from them. There’s the idea of our choices being finite, free will being an illusion, or at the very least limited. There is, also, Plato’s Cave going on. I almost look at it a an inverted-The Matrix. There is no shortage of thoughtful mental discourse that SHARE? makes possible. In fact, I’d argue it forces it on you, and in a way that you eventually realise is exactly what you wanted all along. 

SHARE?? is a Spotlight film at Cinejoy on Friday, March 3rd at 5:15pm. You will absolutely want to check this one out. 
https://creatics.org/create/cinejoy/premiere/more-info/267150/Share-

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