Posts Tagged ‘Visioneers’

My Top Ten

bunnerdocks30x34So I’ve been writing for Fine Arts LA for almost a year now, and I realized that this affords me one of the greatest of art-reviewers’ honors: the end-of-the-year top-ten list.  As a devout follower of numerous art, theatre, and film writers, I find that it’s often popular to downplay the top-ten tradition, dismiss it as a sad reality of the quick-fix world we live in.  But even in this downplaying, there’s a hint of relish in the writer’s voice, as if he/she felt obligated to somehow contain their own excitement at the prospect of shedding off those hundreds upon hundreds of shows, films, galleries, albums, installations, and happenings they consumed throughout the year, finally to narrow it down to the even, clean number of ten.

I myself haven’t been to hundreds of shows this year.  But as a weekly contributor to Fine Arts LA, I have been privy to some of the best art this crazy city has to offer, and I wasn’t limited to one medium.  I saw plays, movies, photography exhibits, I even flirted with the perils of a natural disaster, and thus… my top ten:

10. “Sam Cherry: Photographs of Charles Bukowski, the Black Cat, and Skid Row”

Representing one half of the double exhibit entitled “Bukowski and Burroughs” that went up in early April at the Track 16 Gallery, this series of simple photographs succeeded in portraying what none of these phantasmagoric, apocalyptic fantasy movies can pull off: it showed an old, self-destructive man, reflecting back on the good times he’s had, proud yet regretful, strong yet weak.

9. Ken Tanaka’s “Maximum Pleasant”

story15Ken Tanaka is one artist/performer/youtube-phenomenon I was lucky enough to interview.  His show at the Billy Shire Fine Arts Gallery back in May included videos, paintings, drawings, music, and even a fully functional garage sale.  But it neither the media mash-up that impressed me about Ken nor even his possible double identity.  It was his sense of pure pleasure in creation, his contagious childlike sense of comedy that emanates off his pieces, and made for one of the smiley-est art openings I’ve seen in LA.

8. Landscaping the Den of Saints

It’s easy to skip over small, live theatre in Los Angeles, especially when it’s a three-hour meditation on the ideas of success and ambition like Jacob Smith’s recent, original production at the Avery Schreiber Theatre.  But sometimes you miss out on gems, and this play took on the issue of being young and hungry in Los Angeles, and ended up representing the struggle with a sense of playful accuracy.  And actor Sean Fitzgerald deserves some sort of award for his transformative performance.

7. Visioneers

This film, which is now up on Netflix instant-play, began its distribution independently.  And I mean independently.  I saw Visioneers at the Echo Park Film Center, when it was traveling around to any screen that would take it, and I have to say that it stuck with me.  Starring the still-underrated Zack Galifianakis, the movie is about spontaneous combustion in a futuristic, corporate-run society, where giving someone the middle finger is a sign of respect.  Every time I enter an office building, I think of the bearded Galifianakis flicking me off with a smile.

6. Gavin Bunner’s “It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World”

Another interviewee, the friendly Mr. Bunner isn’t afraid to dress in a cardboard Moby Dick costume and compete in a public boxing match against a Berenstein Bear.  Sure it seems silly, but it’s emblematic of what this young, promising painter is attempting to capture and celebrate in his work: the absurd convergence of pop and pomp in our Google-ingrained brains.

5. Lie of the Mind

I only saw this play last week, so it might just be a fresh lie of my own mind, but Studio Five Productions’ latest show, which you can still catch until the 19th at the Studio/Stage Theatre, is a brave and forceful retelling of Sam Shepard’s original, 1985 story.  The actors are physical and fierce, the music is haunting, the makeup is extraordinary, and the set is like something Jason Schwartzman’s character would dream up in Rushmore.

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The Yuppy’s Hangover

visioneers-poster.jpg

Before attending the premiere event of the Echo Park Film Center’s “Cinema Spekeasy” for the screening of Jared Drake’s directorial debut, Visioneers on Tuesday, I had spent the day staring at a computer screen strapped to a headset.  And no, I was not on some raging World of Warcraft bender.  A part-time telemarketer by trade, my job pretty much consists of dialing phone numbers I look up on a monitor and asking whoever picks up if I could forward their contact information to a client company. Needless to say, it’s a dull task I prefer not to examine too deeply.  So when Visioneers opened on futuristic office-clerk or ‘tunt’, George Washington Winsterhammerman  (Zach Galifianakis), sitting down at his oversized desk, amidst a drab and windowless workspace, harnessing a peculiar looking head device, my soul skipped a beat.  I knew I was in for a confrontational movie-going experience.

Lucky for me, however, Visioneers serves its dose of societal critique with a healthy spoonful of absurdity and makes for an inventive, often humorous two-hour reflection period.  The wacky plot follows the passive, almost mute George as he struggles with the growing paranoia that he will fall victim to the recent epidemic of spontaneous combustion, which is seeping its way into the corporate infrastructure of the company he works for: the Jeffers Corporation.  Founded by the mysterious Mr. Jeffers, it is the “largest and friendliest and most profitable corporation in the history of all mankind,” and serves as only one of the obstacles blocking the path to George’s freedom.  Others include a self-help book obsessed wife; a homoerotic motivational trainer; a pole-vaulting, hippy brother; and most heart wrenching of all, an unspoken love for the voice of the woman who works one floor above him.

Coming off the monster success of this summer’s The Hangover, Galafianakis delivers an intelligent and unexpectedly reserved performance.  Like a seasoned silent film star, he prefers to show a minute amount of facial emotion, allowing for the audience to paint their own faces upon his.  At least I know this was true for me.   For it might have just been the lack of air conditioning in the Echo Park Film Center’s screening room, but I came away from Visioneers wondering how long it would be before I, myself, spontaneously combust.

Visioneers is playing at various, independent locations around the nation, maybe even in your backyard if you choose to host your own screening.  Visit the official website at www.visioneersthemovie.com for details.  The Echo Park Film Center’s “Cinema Speakeasy” nights occur the first Tuesday of every month. For more information, go to www.echoparkfilmcenter.org or call 213-484-8846.  

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