June 28, 2005

Dispatch #88

The final Dispatch of June is a real hootenanny, or, to quote Buffy the Vampire Slayer, "well, it's chock full of hoot, just a little bit of nanny."
#88 | June 28, 2005

"Hallo, Piglet. This is Tigger."
"Oh, is it?" said Piglet, and he edged round to the other side of the table. "I thought Tiggers were smaller than that."
"Not the big ones," said Tigger.
-- (R.I.P., Paul Winchell, the original voice of Tigger, and John Fiedler, the voice of Piglet.)

GreenCine is proud to announce the winners in the DivX, Inc., Presents the GreenCine Online Film Festival: Congratulations to Narrative Feature Grand Prize winner Red Cockroaches, a futuristic thriller written and directed by Miguel Coyula, and to Documentary Feature Grand Prize winner Empire of Juramidam, a profile of unconventional religious practices directed by Colum Stapleton. We also extend a hearty pat on the back to the Audience Choice Award winner, Rob Nilsson's Security, and the recipient of the special Eclection Award, Peep Show, which was directed by J.X. Williams and restored by Noel Lawrence. The two Grand Prize winners will remain available for download on GreenCine until July 5, so check 'em out.

Before sending the kids off to Sleepaway Camp, you may want to take a peek at GreenCine's latest film primer: Slashers. Liz Cole cautiously steps into the domain of Freddy Kreuger, Jason Vorhees, Michael Myers, Norman Bates and all their twisted cousins - along with a few underrated examples - in the horror genre that continues to put people in the seats with one primary purpose: to make 'em scream. Read it, if you dare.

Spoken completely in iambic pentameter, Yes is hardly a run-of-the-mill love story, but then, director Sally Potter has never been one to play by the rules. In "Hope is a choice": Yes, Hannah Eaves talks with Potter and her two leads (but not in iambic pentameter), Simon Abkarian and Joan Allen, about love and anger - and optimism - in a post-9/11 world.

The GreenCine Daily, our award-winning film blog, offers up a buffet of summer eating, er, reading, with critical essays, reviews, commentary, news, along with online viewing and listening tips. All you can eat! Er, read.

Video-on-Demand: Gulliver's Travels (1939).

With CGI now de rigeur for animated features, it's actually charmingly refreshing to look at an old-fangled cel cartoon, and especially charming is Dave Fleischer's lovely (if loose) adaptation of Jonathan Swift's classic Gulliver's Travels. The studio used a mix of Rotoscoping (live action later traced over with animation) and traditional animation to create their unique look, and while that may appear quaint now, it's still of interest to animation buffs and the young, and young at heart. Big budget for its time, Fleischer's Gulliver was a Technicolor, song-filled adaptation. It actually was nominated for two Oscars in respect to the latter - for Original Score and Best Song ("Faithful Forever"). "The brothers, Max and Dave, created what is arguably the most important work among the earliest animators," asserted DigitallyObssessed, "and Gulliver's Travels remains one of the finest feats of full-feature animated classics... for the beauty and genius in the art of its active illustrations." You and your family can enjoy Gulliver's Travels now or anytime you wish via GreenCine's rapidly expanding Video-on-Demand service.

GreenCine Staff Pick of the Week: I'm Not Scared (2003).

As much a film about the human conscience as it is about boyhood innocence, and the abrupt dissolution thereof, Gabriele Salvatores' I'm Not Scared is also a terrifically entertaining and tense, even frightening work (it's probably too scary for younger kids). The story follows ten-year-old Michele (Giuseppe Cristiano is a real find), in a remote Italian village, who uncovers a dark secret that jars his relationship with his parents and his view of the world outside. The film's a great example of how to correctly tell a story from one point of view, from the eyes of a young boy, without condescension. And the pastoral Italian countryside, the hazy feel of summer days there among the wheat fields, is captured by Italo Petriccione's radiant cinematography. I'm Not Scared is told with such compassion, depth and deliberate pacing, refusing to go for the all-too-easy shocks - though it is genuinely suspenseful - that it's interesting to compare how this story, based on a real life crime, is presented here versus how it might have been recreated in the likely overpaced American version. At any rate, it's a fine work that will stay with you long afterwards. -- Craig Phillips

Our highlights of this week's new DVD releases include a still all-too relevant doc and a cornucopia of world cinema from past and present:

Gunner Palace (2004). Back in late 2003 and 2004, Michael Tucker, pretty much on his own and equipped with little more than a camera and a bullet-proof vest, slipped into Baghdad and hung with the US Army 2/3 Field Artillery Division, also known as the Gunner Battalion. And they're based in a palatial mansion that once belonged to Uday Hussein (one of Saddam's sons), known since it was bombed out and they moved in as Gunner Palace. The film is not about the rights and wrongs of the war and argues neither for nor against it. It's simply about capturing the day-to-day lives of the men and women we've sent over there, the very real dangers they face, the uncertainties, the frustrations, the pain and loss, but also the moments of humor, a lot of it, of course, rather dark. "The raw inconclusiveness of Gunner Palace is the truest measure of its authenticity as an artifact of our time and of its value for future attempts to understand what the United States is doing in Iraq," wrote A.O. Scott in the New York Times. "Each time I have seen it, I have emerged feeling moved, angry, scared, hopeful, frustrated and dispirited - and grateful for this confusion, which is its own form of understanding." Be sure, too, to read our interview with Tucker, conducted while he and his wife, Petra Epperlein, were still editing the film.

Bad Guy (2001). "It continues to amaze me how much Kim Ki Duk can accomplish with so little dialogue and what wonderful scenes that he can paint onto the screen with his use of color and music," writes markhl. "I'd recommend Bad Guy primarily to fans of experimental cinema and to those who've enjoyed the director's earlier, more radical, films." We've got an interview to run along with this one, too. Jonathan Marlow spoke with Kim Ki-duk this spring during the San Francisco International Film Festival.

Crazed Fruit (1956). "Stained with hormonal dew and ideological lip sweat," wrote the San Francisco Bay Guardian, "Crazed Fruit is a fevered portrait of incipent social fraying that manages to remain corrosive even today." Based on the controversial novel by Shintaro Ishihara. This Criterion disc features audio commentary by renowned Japanese-film scholar Donald Richie.

This week sees the release of three films by Hungarian director Béla Tarr, perhaps most widely known for his 2000 film, Werckmeister Harmonies; just one film out would be an event since none have yet been released in the US on DVD. But... three! And they are: Family Nest (1978), a startlingly, almost harshly realistic story of the hardships Hungarians faced in 1970s, The Outsider (1981), following András as he tries to hold down whatever job he can land in Budapest, and The Prefab People (1982), "the best of his early works because it achieves such a degree of intimacy that its lack of ostentatious filmmaking never impedes its ability to observe its characters." (MovieMartyr)

Totally F***ed Up (1993). "Think of it as Jean Luc Godard doing Saved by the Bell, or Antonioni doing Beverly Hills 90210," wrote PopcornQ of this early feature by Gregg Araki, currently winning plaudits for his Mysterious Skin. "Totally F***ed Up is one of those independent movies that is worth watching simply for the experience of it and also to see and support a young talented filmmaker as he develops a body of work that is essential to American culture."

The Browning Version (1951). "Good show!" exclaims TV Guide. "[Terence] Rattigan adapted his own play for the screen, and it's lovingly directed by [Anthony] Asquith and acted within an inch of the viewer's life by [Michael] Redgrave and a magnificent small ensemble.... Absolutely not to be missed." At Cannes that year, 1951, Rattigan won the Best Screenplay Award and Redgrave won Best Actor. More fine work from Criterion, who've added to the disc a 1958 interview with Redgrave and a new interview with Mike Figgis, who directed a remake in 1994.

New Anime:

Human Crossing Volume 3: Message in White (2005). "There isn't a whole lot in anime that can be compared to Human Crossing," writes Anime News Network. "It's called honest, straightforward storytelling, and in an art form that often favors style over substance, it's definitely not a bad idea."

Fill up your queue. We recommend having a minimum of ten times the number of slots you have, i.e., forty if you're on the four-out plan. If you're having trouble thinking of titles to rent, here are a few ideas: check out member lists (which you can look at chronologically, alphabetically or by average rating) and editorial top lists, browse through primers and our active discussion boards, look at our lists of titles coming soon, among other ideas. So queue away! And if you need to watch something right now, take a gander at our rapidly expanding Video-on-Demand offerings. And for ease of browsing, you can look at our currently available VOD titles by genre; go to the main page for a list of all genres.

Service tip of the week: In order to allow for access to nearly every movie released on disc (and a few that aren't), we've created the ability for our members to request titles that we do not currently carry by simply clicking the "Request" button. The button appears on our movie description pages in place of the "Rent" button, where applicable. When you request a title using this method, it's added to your Request List, conveniently archiving every one of your requested titles. This includes some titles that are not yet released on disc. When the discs arrive, we simply move them to your queue and notify you by email. (You can also view your Request List at any time by clicking on the link on the left side of the GreenCine site.) This and other informational tidbits are available for you to read, memorize, and then recite aloud at cocktail parties, on our handy list of FAQs.

The Dispatch newsletter is now archived for easy accessibility on GreenCine's new Press and Marketing blog. Bookmark it!

Congratulations to the winners of several recent GreenCine trivia contests: Fox Film Noir set winners were SVance, BuzzGunderson, thedeevolution, gisellebill, waynep275 and WoodyAllenFan90 (the answer was The Razor's Edge and Of Human Bondage); Nero Wolfe winners were crwdesign and LLM13254 (the answer was Edward Arnold). Our next trivia contest, arising this Friday, is perfect for you brainiacs out there: the fascinating documentary Gray Matter.

Next Wednesday, July 6, GreenCine will be showcasing two of the winners in the DivX, Inc., Presents the GreenCine Online Film Festival: the Documentary Grand Prize winner, Empire of Juramidam, and the special Eclection Award winner, Peep Show. The lights will dim at 7:30 PM. Ticket prices are $7, or $5 for GreenCine and YBCA members, seniors and students. The screening will take place at the Yerba Buena Center, located at 701 Mission Street, at Third, in San Francisco. We hope to see you there!

We recommend viewing this newsletter in all of its HTML glory; check your e-mail program's settings to view HTML. This newsletter is sent to GreenCine members only. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter in the future, log in to the GreenCine site, click "View Your Profile" then click Edit Profile. Choose "no" on the "Subscribe to the GreenCine newsletter" option and click "Update Profile." Archives of the Dispatch are now available online on GreenCine's Press and Marketing blog.

Posted by cphillips at 4:48 PM

June 21, 2005

Dispatch #87

Latest tips on new articles, DVD and VOD releases, and oh! So much more. Read on, MacDuff.

#87 | June 21, 2005
"It is said that what is called 'the spirit of an age' is something to which one cannot return. That this spirit gradually dissipates is due to the world's coming to an end. In the same way, a single year does not have just spring or summer. A single day, too, is the same. For this reason, although one would like to change today's world back to the spirit of one hundred years or more ago, it cannot be done. Thus it is important to make the best out of every generation." -- from Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai.

Today is the longest day of the year, the first day of summer, the solstice, and we hope it covers you with abundant sunshine. And if it doesn't, you can always rely on the kindness of films from GreenCine. And if it does, you should still be watching movies, because, as Alvy Singer said in Annie Hall (in our monthly Woody quote), "sun is bad for you. Everything our parents said was good is bad. Sun, milk, red meat... college."

And while you're staying indoors, there's still time to download, and vote on, the ten fine finalists in the GreenCine Online Film Festival, which ends its run Sunday.

Artist-actress-filmmaker-writer Miranda July is so hyphenated she's hard to keep up with, and has had to rev herself up even further with the release of her startlingly good feature debut Me and You and Everyone We Know. In conversation with Craig Phillips, July paused long enough to shed some light on the process of making the indie film that both Roger Ebert and Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum tagged the best they saw this year at Sundance.

Up next: An interview with Chris Terrio, director of Heights, a new indie film also arriving in theaters this month, featuring Jesse Bradford, Elizabeth Banks and Glenn Close.

A blog day's journey into night: the GreenCine Daily covers the world of film like a blanket. Among the Daily's new offerings is a fine encapsulation of the latest films from the CineVegas Vanguard Directors series.

Video-on-Demand: Fame Whore (1997).

Now available via GreenCine's Video-on-Demand service: Ever-subversive Hawaii-based independent filmmaker Jon Moritsugu took sheer delight with Fame Whore, an amusing takedown of indie and undie attitudes that Entertainment Weekly gave an "A; his most successfully realized flick." The film is organized as a trilogy of tales about three people who all share the overwhelming desire to excel, no matter the odds: a tennis star, a wannabe fashion designer (Amy Davis, who co-wrote Moritsugu's Scumrock), and an animal activist. "A deadpan comedy that relies on a sense of spot-on accuracy to capture the lives of these fringe-art rebels...refreshingly turned on themselves," wrote the LA Times of this "sweetly mocking comedy about the perils of reaching 30 with little to show for one's avant-gardeness except crazy hair and an ossifying attitude." [LA Weekly] You can watch Fame Whore now or anytime you wish via GreenCine's "hella cool" Video-on-Demand service.

GreenCine Staff Pick of the Week: Me Without You (2001).

Sandra Goldbacher's lovely and underrated Me Without You is one of the few of the spate of recent female bonding pictures to actually get that right (take that, Ya Yas), following as it does two English girls' intense intense friendship (and intense sexual rivalry), on into adulthood over the course of twenty years. As Goldbacher's first feature, the Victorian era piece The Governess, reminded me of a more emotionally complex Jane Austen, Me Without You, even if set in the 20th century, more directly reminds of Austen, in humor, tone and plotting, in which the characters are both appreciably wise and yet self-sabotaging in the way that people are. The male characters are thankfully three-dimensional whereas they could easily have all been conveniently drab louts. Kyle MacLachlan in particular has a great supporting role as the college lecturer both women fall for. But it is Anna Friel and Michelle Williams (American, but with a spot-on accent) who bring the story of this often-toxic friendship fully to life. It may be a "small" film, but Me Without You is large in heart and emotional scope. -- Tamara Lees

Note: A recent staff pick, Go Tell the Spartans, had a last minute release date change which we unfortunately weren't notified about until after newsletter press time. Instead of releasing on that day, May 24, the DVD is now due out on August 30. We apologize for any disappointment this may have caused.

Our own handpicked highlights of this week's new DVD releases include several great documentaries and, even greater, Josephine Baker:

Immortal (2004). One of the week's most unusual releases. Enki Bilal, born in Belgrade and now living and working in France, is a comic-book artist with a highly dedicated cult following. Here, he brings the first volume of his Nikopol Trilogy, La Foire Immortels (The Immmortal Market) to visually spectacular life with the help of a cast that includes Thomas Kretschmann and Charlotte Rampling.

They Came Back (2004). What if 70 million people came back from the dead - zombies, basically - but they weren't particularly interested in chowing down on the living? Suppose they simply wanted to reassimilate themselves back into society? They're not too quick about it, of course, and they have to sort of learn to cope with the sluggishness of their bodies and the forgetfulness of their minds, but they're trying. "It's rather amazing how far the film is able to coast on its uniquely fascinating premise," writes Ed Gonzalez in Slant, "even if it isn't much of a stretch for its director: [Robin] Campillo co-authored Laurent Cantet's incredible Time Out, a different kind of zombie film about the deadening effects of too much work on the human psyche, and They Came Back is almost as impressive in its concern with the existential relationship between the physical and non-physical world."

In the Realms of the Unreal (2003). An extraordinary and unique documentary about one of the most famous, intriguing and even disturbing outsider artists ever known. Or rather, unknown; though the Chicago janitor left behind 300 paintings and a 15,000-page novel, his work is the only record of a lonely life that ended in 1973. "Was Henry Darger's output the work of a singular artist or the symptom of mental illness?" asks Dave Kehr in the New York Times. "[Jessica] Yu suggests that the question is not only impossible to answer, but also reductive and inappropriate in the face of such a singular achievement. Obscure by nature and unwieldy by design, Darger's work is difficult to confront and consume; Ms. Yu has brought it a little closer, and that is as fine a public service as an art documentary can provide."

Put the Camera on Me (2003). "An amazing, unclassifiable bit of queer Americana," enthused Bright Lights Film Journal editor Gary Morris when he caught this one at the San Francisco International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival in 2003. "Ever been to a family function and tried to pick out the future gay boys of America by cataloguing the strange behaviors of your young cousins and their friends?" asks Ed Gonzalez in the City Pages. "If so, this film from Darren Stein (Jawbreaker) and Adam Shell is for you."

Bright Leaves (2003). "Hearing Ross McElwee's voice at the beginning of a movie is like getting a phone call from an old friend," writes Ty Burr in the Boston Globe. "The Cambridge-based documentarian is a raconteur of elegiac discursiveness, and films such as 1986's Sherman's March and 1994's Time Indefinite wander from topic to topic with a charming, self-absorbed, and oddly liberating waywardness. Bright Leaves is supposedly about the North Carolina tobacco industry and McElwee's ancestral connection to it, but somehow you don't mind that you end up hearing actress Patricia Neal talk about her enduring love for Gary Cooper."

Siren of the Tropics (1928). No history of Europe between the wars is complete without at least a mention of the woman who electrified the continent, Josephine Baker. While you may have seen clips of her before, there was a lot more to her vibrant persona than a banana dance. She made features as well, and this is her first. The disc also features Josephine Baker: The Performer and more extras. Also out today: Baker's first talkie, Zou Zou, a 1934 "backstage musical" in the tradition of 42nd Street, featuring Jean Gabin who was himself just about to break and break huge around the world; and Princess Tam Tam (1935), which Vincent Canby in the New York Times called "Irresistible... enchanting." The last disc also features Josephine Baker: The Films.

New Anime:

R.O.D. The TV Series. Volume 7: The New World (2005). "A very dynamic series with some interesting characters," says JHeneghan. "A good extension of the R.O.D. OVA."

Fill up your queue. We recommend having a minimum of ten times the number of slots you have, i.e., forty if you're on the four-out plan. If you're having trouble thinking of titles to rent, here are a few ideas: check out member lists (which you can look at chronologically, alphabetically or by average rating) and editorial top lists, browse through primers and our active discussion boards, look at our lists of titles coming soon, among other ideas. So queue away! And if you need to watch something right now, take a gander at our rapidly expanding Video-on-Demand offerings. And for ease of browsing, you can look at our currently available VOD titles by genre; go to the main page for a list of all genres.

Service tip of the week: If you would like a personalized icon (and you should, because it's fun), please send a 64x64 gif or jpg file to icons@greencine.com, using the email address associated with your GreenCine account. Please include your GreenCine screen name in the body of your email, send the file as an attachment (do not embed the icon in the email nor send a link to a web page) and indicate if it is an animated icon or a still. We'll put your icon up for you (allow up to a week for icon changes to take effect). If you forget what we just told you, no worries, this information is also now on the "choose icon" page that links from your "edit profile" page. Join the icon club!

We've said it before but we'll say it here again: This is the last week you can download and vote on the finalists in the GreenCine Online Film Festival. Presented by DivX, the festival offers filmmakers a share of the profits and you exposure to some of the best new documentaries and indie features from around the world. So watch 'em, vote on 'em, and spread the word.

Congratulations to the winners of several recent GreenCine trivia contests: The X Files Mythology winners were EricBill0 and Nyetah (the answer was "Trust no one"); Paul McCartney in Red Square winners were bcombo, AnjKay, Yowanda, MDixon, Echan, Sman, dftpnk, mem1170, godumun3 and wldree (the answer was "Maybe I'm Amazed" and each winner will take home a package of the disc, a poster, LP and pin). Take a whack at our next trivia contest giveaway, up on GreenCine this Friday: Nero Wolfe Season 2.

GreenCine's next Yerba Buena Center screening will be on July 6, when we present the Documentary Grand Prize winner of the GreenCine Online Film Festival. The winner will be announced next week and we'll have more details then. Whichever film it is, we guarantee you won't want to miss it!

We recommend viewing this newsletter in all of its HTML glory; check your e-mail program's settings to view HTML. This newsletter is sent to GreenCine members only. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter in the future, log in to the GreenCine site, click "View Your Profile" then click Edit Profile. Choose "no" on the "Subscribe to the GreenCine newsletter" option and click "Update Profile."

Posted by cphillips at 12:18 PM

June 14, 2005

Dispatch #86

#86 | June 14, 2005

Read on for the latest news from GreenCine, including some special Father's Day wishes.


"When the nasty old Bogeyman fills me with fears / And my little old pinafore is all wet with tears / And my cute little pug nose is all red from crying / Who is it that saves me and keeps me from dying? / My Pa! / When my little pink cheeks are pale with fright / Who is it that lifts me and holds me tight / And says, "There, there, little man. Everything is all right"? / My Pa!" -- from A Bear for Punishment (Chuck Jones, 1951).

So, here we are, back with you again. Yes by-gum, and yes by-golly... Well, if you can finish that sentence, you're a trivia expert and/or seriously dating yourself.* But, yes, here we are again, with another Dispatch, covering the latest tidings from the world of Video-on-Demand, DVD, and film in general. Thanks for making GreenCine's newsletter a part of your week. And before we continue, let's salute dear ol' dads everywhere for putting up with all of us. Happy Father's Day!

*"Kukla Fran and dear old Ollie."

Appropriate for Father's Day: Arianné Ulmer Cipes is the producer of a documentary called Edgar G. Ulmer: The Man Off-Screen, about her father, one of the finest low-budget directors ever and most famous for Detour and The Black Cat. Cipes and GreenCine's Jonathan Marlow discuss Ulmer and the experience of growing up with a director father in Arianné Ulmer Cipes: "Everything was exploding at the same time."

Expect more articles to appear in the days and weeks ahead, including an interview with filmmaker-artist-actress-writer (and a bunch of other hyphenates) Miranda July (Me and You and Everyone We Know) and a slasher movie primer just in time for summer camp! All this and more coming your way soon, right after this commercial message. [Just kidding.]

Even before summer officially starts, the GreenCine Daily happily wears shorts - that is, a non-stop barrage of tidbits from the world of film coverage, from magazines, newspaper, blogs, festivals, and the makers themselves, the Daily has 'em covered. Current: insight and commentary on Hayao Miyazaki's Howl's Moving Castle, as well as a wrap-up of the just concluded Seattle International Film Festival.

Video-on-Demand: Il Mare (2000).

Now available via GreenCine's Video-on-Demand service: the lovely Korean romance Il Mare. "Jun Ji-hyun and Lee Jung-Jae [both] put in subtle and understated performances that suit the film's tone and storyline perfectly," wrote DVDTimes (UK). "The film manages to be both heartbreaking and uplifting at the same time and leaves the viewer with the same sorts of feelings as the Korean comedy, My Sassy Girl." "I loved this movie," remarked rmarkd, "a romance story with a 'touch of fantasy' that allows for some interesting situations." You can watch Il Mare now or anytime you wish via GreenCine's Video-on-Demand service.

GreenCine Staff Pick of the Week: My Darling Clementine (1946).

One of my all-time favorite episodes of M*A*S*H is the one in which they get a print of John Ford's My Darling Clementine, only to suffer through a series of projector breakdowns and other delays. To pass the time, they do impressions of the indellible cast. That includes favorite, unimitable character actor Walter Brennan, Victor Mature - arguably his best performance - as Doc Holliday and of course, Henry Fonda in one of his most beloved roles as Wyatt Earp, who arrives in Tombstone ("Sure is a hard town to play a quiet game o' poker in") to raise cattle, only to find himself, and his brothers, grappling with cattle rustlers and fighting with Doc over the eponymous girl. After seeing Clementine, you can understand why the 4077th might have been so excited to get the film and why it remains one of the finest Westerns ever. It's Ford's telltale "asides" - the dance in the church, the colorful locals, Earp's haircut - that make the film such a delight, but even the asides have a greater purpose, and well before the famous end, in the unforgettable shootout at the OK Corral, you'll likely have been moved once or twice. The film was gently satirized itself, or at least referenced, in Burt Kennedy's comparably enjoyable Support Your Local Sheriff. The two would make a swell double-feature. -- Craig Phillips

We bring you forthwith highlights of week's new DVD releases, including a couple of sleepers, a couple of classics, and the most beautiful film about a donkey ever:

Au Hasard, Balthazar (1966). Criterion releases one helluva lot of great films, it goes without saying, but this one is surely one of the most highly anticipated. "To cut to the chase," wrote J. Hoberman in the Village Voice, "Robert Bresson's heart-breaking and magnificent Au Hasard Balthazar - the story of a donkey's life and death in rural France - is the supreme masterpiece by one of the greatest of 20th-century filmmakers. Bringing together all Bresson's highly developed ideas about acting, sound, and editing, as well as grace, redemption, and human nature, Balthazar is understated and majestic, sensuous and ascetic, ridiculous and sublime." Among the disc's special features: a video interview with Donald Richie and "Un metteur en ordre: Robert Bresson," a 1966 French TV program about the film featuring Bresson, Jean-Luc Godard, Louis Malle and members of the cast and crew.

Rory O'Shea Was Here (2004). The story of two friends confined to wheelchairs is "funny, touching, affirmative," wrote Philip French in the Observer. "There are odd, slightly sticky moments, but [Damien] O'Donnell, his screenwriters Jeffrey Caine and Christian O'Reilly and his cast avoid the sentimentality and the triumphalism so often found in movies about the disabled."

A Dirty Shame (2004). The incomparable Tracey Ullman is the driving, thrusting, sweaty life force propelling John Waters's almost nostalgic return to his trashy roots.

ABC Africa (2001). "The richness and emotional impact of ABC Africa comes partly from the balance it achieves between the director's personality... and his vast, terrible subject," wrote A.O. Scott of Abbas Kiarostami's documentary in the New York Times. "He never pretends to have mastered the subject - the film's title suggests the elementary state of his knowledge - or to be able to solve Uganda's problems by observing them. But you come away from his film overwhelmed, hopeful and... illuminated." See also: Our Iranian New Wave primer.

Edward II (1992). In his re-imagining of Christopher Marlowe's 16th century play, Derek Jarman "has taken all the latent homosexual subtext in Marlowe's original and brought it front and center - and then some," wrote Marjorie Baumgarten in the Austin Chronicle. "Settings go back and forth between sparsely decorated medieval castles and present-day Outrage demonstrations.... Then there are these transfixing moments and compelling images, like when Edward and Gaveston dance a last dance while songstress Annie Lennox sings Cole Porter's 'Every Time We Say Goodbye' video-style in the background, a moment rich with resonance and acute awareness."

The First Amendment Project (2004). This fast-paced doc follows the case with comedy built into it right from the start, the one Fox brought against Al Franken for using their slogan in the title of his book, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right.

Heaven Can Wait (1943). We should first make clear that this is not the movie Warren Beatty remade in 1978; his Heaven Can Wait is actually a remake of Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941). No, this comic gem from Ernst Lubitsch, his first in color, is "his spiritual autobiography," as the British Film Institute puts it. "In order to determine his posthumous destination, Henry Van Cleve tells the story of his life to the Devil in alternately comic and poignant episodes." This Criterion release features a conversation with critics Molly Haskell and Andrew Sarris, a 30-minute portrait of screenwriter Samson Raphaelson and more extras.

The Star (1952). Bette Davis used to refer to the 1950s as her "ten black years," and in this 1952 low-budget Hollywood drama about an aging actress desperately trying to stage a comeback, she seems to be screaming out all her frustrations. Not only at her own fate but at her arch-nemesis as well, Joan Crawford (the screenwriters knew Crawford well). The salt in the wound: Davis would be nominated for an Oscar for her portrayal here, but would lose to Shirley Booth for Come Back, Little Sheba, a role originally offered to Davis.

New Anime:

Stellvia. Volume 5: Foundation V. (2005). For the Anime News Network, this is one of those few series that actually improves as it moves along. It was there that Carlo Santos wrote most recently, "Few people would think of turning to a high-spirited sci-fi series for romance, but Volume 4 of Stellvia proves that it can hold its own against any other girl-meets-boy anime out there.... Our little meatball-headed space cadet is truly coming of age, and yes, this series is getting better." Let's hope the trend holds up for Volume 5.

To make your queue work for yueue, fill it up. Your queue works best when filled with a minimum of ten times the number of slots you have, i.e., forty if you're on the four-out plan. If you're having trouble thinking of titles to rent, here are a few ideas: check out member lists (which you can look at chronologically, alphabetically or by average rating) and editorial top lists, browse through primers and our active discussion boards, look at our lists of titles coming soon, among other ideas. So queue away! And if you need to watch something right now, take a gander at our rapidly expanding Video-on-Demand offerings. And for ease of browsing, you can look at our currently available VOD titles by genre; go to the main page for a list of all genres.

Service tip of the week: Time to remind y'all about region codes. Region codes reflect the region of the world a particular DVD was released, and exist because film studios want to control the home release of movies in different countries (as theater releases aren't simultaneous). The United States is in "region 1" and both mainstream disc releases and most DVD players purchased here are R1 compatible only. Unfortunately, as you've no doubt discovered, not all films are available on DVD, and certainly not all on Region 1. Some people buy all-region players so they can purchase and watch an import copy of a favorite international film not yet releaed in R1 in the States. Most of us don't go to the trouble and just remain slightly irritated by the whole system. There is such a thing as an "all-region" disc (also known as Region 0), and GreenCine does rent some of these out, but we don't rent out non-R1 or non-R0 discs at this time, in order to avoid confusion and frustration. You can read all about it in our very useful little FAQ's entry on the matter.

There's still time to check out the finalists in the GreenCine Online Film Festival, presented by DivX. All ten docs and narrative features will remain available for download in secure DivX format through June 26. Watch. Rate. Repeat. Spread the word. We also recommend reading our DivX FAQ.

Congratulations to the winners of GreenCine's recent The Tomorrow People contest: beckricci and badfish. Meanwhile, our next trivia contest giveaway will appear on the home page on Friday: Paul McCartney in Red Square, in which we'll not only be giving away DVDs but rare LPs, posters and pins! Say "bring it on home to me" and enter!

GreenCine's next Yerba Buena Center screening will be on July 6, when we present the Documentary Grand Prize winner of the GreenCine Online Film Festival. More details to come!

We recommend viewing this newsletter in all of its HTML glory; check your e-mail program's settings to view HTML. This newsletter is sent to GreenCine members only. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter in the future, log in to the GreenCine site, click "View Your Profile" then click Edit Profile. Choose "no" on the "Subscribe to the GreenCine newsletter" option and click "Update Profile."

Posted by cphillips at 3:57 PM

June 7, 2005

Dispatch #85

GreenCine Dispatch newsletter, June 7, 2005. For your reading pleasure:
"I want to play with my toys!"
-- Scarlet Empress.

Speaking of toys in the technological sense, GreenCine is having fun with its expanding collection of online films, available for download or streaming. Now, some of you ask us, "What's all this about Video-on-Demand (VOD)? I see it on your site and hear about it, but by golly, I'm afraid! Hold me!" Well, usually it doesn't go quite that way but you get the idea. We're here to tell you, don't be afraid. VOD is fast becoming the coolest new way to watch movies, with the numbers growing and the options expanding. Between our Online Film Festival, and its ten first-rate finalists, and all the other new VOD releases we helpfully point to both here and on the GreenCine home page, you'll see, if you haven't already, that the choices are increasingly diverse. So, go play with our toys.

We'd also like to take a moment of silence to honor Anne Bancroft, who, sadly, passed away yesterday. Not just Mel Brooks' wife, a terrific actress in her own right and most famous for The Graduate - but we also loved her in 84 Charing Cross Road. "Here's to you, Mrs. Robinson."

Difficult to typify or classify, the films of Brad Anderson continue to draw critical buzz but not always a big audience. His most recent, the highly praised and rather dark The Machinist, did little to change that pattern, but is due for a new appreciation upon its DVD release. In Brad Anderson: "The real horror is within," the director looks back on his work to this point, and to the future, including a rumored Crazies remake, in an engaging chat with Alison Veneto.

The GreenCine Daily continues along its merry way with links to critical looks at upcoming summer films, big and small - Spielberg, Miyazaki, Batman Begins, and so on - along with festival reports, online viewing tips, and more. Go make our award-winning film blog a part of your balanced breakfast every day.

Video-on-Demand: Water Margin: True Colors of Heroes (1993).

Water Margin: True Colors of Heroes (a.k.a. All Men Are Brothers: Blood of the Leopard) is a remake of the Shaw Brothers original epic Water Margin, and adapted from a portion of the Chinese literary classic "Outlaws of the Marsh," wisely narrowing focus to a few main protagonists and villains. With the plot not the thing here, and the theme - brotherhood conquers all - fairly obvious, it's the acting (Tony Leung and Wai Lam star), spectacular stunts, sparkling costumes, catchy music and, of course, the action, that makes it fun. "The action is quite good," extolled HKFlix, "using enough wire work to make things interesting without going too over the top, and the actors do well - especially Elvis Tsui, who puts in a career-best performance (one that garnered him a Best Actor nomination for the Hong Kong Film Awards) and puts [the film] above the usual wuxia fare." Watch True Colors of Heroes anytime you want via GreenCine's Video-on-Demand service.

GreenCine Staff Pick of the Week: Touching the Game: The Story of the Cape Cod Baseball League (2004).

Baseball season, of course, is in full swing, and if you're like me, you may have a love-hate relationship with the game as it stands today: free agency makes it hard to get too attached to any player on your favorite team, the steroids controversy, egos, injuries... and yet we stick by it. For a beautiful glimpse of baseball as it could or should be (and on the day of the annual amateur draft), the documentary Touching the Game: The Story of the Cape Cod Baseball League goes right down the heart of the plate in a portrayal of a minor league. One of the film's most interesting insights is on the adjustment these fresh from college players have to make to using wooden bats (versus the aluminum bats used in the NCAA). But as much as the film is about baseball - and there is plenty of footage and fine interviews with recognizable baseball talent who camp up though the Cape Cod league - the film is also tribute to the perservence of the players, who work odd jobs to support themselves (this is a long way from George Steinbrenner when it comes to salaries), and to the dedicated fans. It's also a winning peek into small town American life. But mostly it's about baseball, and a treat for fans yearning to care about it again.-- Tamara Lees

Fine directors in touch with their dark sides highlight this week's new DVD releases:

The Machinist (2004). It'd be a shame if this film becomes known only as the one for which Christian Bale lost so much weight it's scary. Not only is Bale, whom we'll be seeing this summer looking a lot healthier even if he is hovering over Gotham City in a black mask and tights, becoming one of the most daring actors working, but, as noted in the aforementioned interview with him, director Brad Anderson has also clearly decided he won't be gliding on the accolades he's garnered for his previous work, including the innovative Session 9. This one is, as Stephen Holden put it in the New York Times, "an expertly manipulated exercise in psychological horror."

The Agronomist (2003). Jonathan Demme surely has one of the most intriguingly spotty records around. His hand seems most confident when he turns to the documentary; see, for example, Stop Making Sense, a strong contender for the best feature-length record of a musical performance ever made. With The Agronomist, Demme, having been fascinated by Haiti for years, is once again on solid ground. At the doc's center is Jean Dominique, founder of Radio Haiti-Inter, "a scourge to the successive waves of corrupt politicians that have for decades ravaged that much-oppressed island," as Peter Brunette put it in his review for indieWIRE. "Dominique's fierce love of liberty and his deep sympathy for the plight of his poor countrymen come across very strongly indeed, with or without the details. The original music, by Haiti's Wyclif Jean, offers surprise after surprise."

Untold Scandal (2003). Maybe you've seen Dangerous Liaisons and maybe you've seen Valmont and maybe you've even seen Roger Vadim's take or the French mini-series, but you've never seen Chodleros de Laclos's classic novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses dressed up quite like this. Director E J-Yong sets the story during the Chosun Dynasty of 18th-century Korea. It works. The film is as sexy and engaging as any previous adaptation.

Under the Flag of the Rising Sun (2004). "One of [Kinji] Fukasaku's angriest and most explicit explorations of his great theme: postwar trauma and warp-speed transformations in Japanese society," wrote Dennis Lim in the Village Voice.

"Imaginary Heroes (2004) is a queer-eyed valentine to Sigourney Weaver," writes Keith Uhlich in Slant. "Writer-director Dan Harris (co-author of X-Men 2, that downright odd, rainbow-colored ode to ostracized superheroes) is lucky to have Weaver and he knows it... Movies, perhaps more than any art, can cast profound, epiphanic illumination on our personal histories, and Weaver's performance - clearly a cinematic paean to a mythologically perfect lioness - captures something of every mother's deep-felt agony and ecstasy, that gnawing, loving need to protect their children, at whatever cost, from any and all of life's inevitable hurts."

Dead Ringers (1988). This creepily profound masterwork represents nothing less than some of the best work ever done by director David Cronenberg, currently riding another wave of critical appreciation following the premiere of his A History of Violence in Cannes this year, Jeremy Irons, who plays both twin gynecologists Beverly and Elliot Mantle, and Geneviève Bujold as their mutual love interest. One of our humble editors' favorite films of all time.

"The hoodwink-picture genre doesn't have a whole lot of peaks to choose from, but Nightmare Alley (1947) is one of the few," wrote Elvis Mitchell in the New York Times. And J. Hoberman wrote in the Village Voice, "This 1947 account of an archetypal American's rise and fall is neither a great movie nor even a classic noir but it has a great ambition to be daring and, once seen, is not easily forgotten." More noir new to disc: The Street With No Name (1948), and Sam Fuller's House of Bamboo (1955).

Orwell Rolls in His Grave (2004). "A marvel of passionate succinctness," wrote Variety, "Robert Kane Pappas's docu critically examines the Fourth Estate, once the bastion of American democracy. Docu asks, 'Could a media system, controlled by a few global corporations with the ability to overwhelm all competing voices, be able to turn lies into truth?'" Interviewees include Michael Moore, naturally, but also the iconoclastic British journalist Greg Palast and Nation contributor Mark Crispin Miller.

New Anime:

Gantz, Volume 5. "Altogether..." wrote Battie hesitantly of the first volume, "not only weird and depraved, but often disgusting, too. And tons of gore. But at the same time, there is a morbid part of me that wants to see more. It helps that the story line is interesting."

Go forth and multiply. Queues are most effective when they are filled with a fair number of discs; we suggest having a minimum of ten times the number of slots you have, i.e., forty if you're on the four-out plan. There are plenty of ways to populate your queue, including looking at our lists of titles coming soon, member lists (which you can look at chronologically, alphabetically or by average rating) and editorial top lists, by browsing through primers and our active discussion boards, among other ways, so queue away! And if you need to watch something right now, take a gander at our rapidly expanding Video-on-Demand offerings.

If you have a request, comment or idea specific to one aspect of the GreenCine site, take a gander at our contact page for a list of departmental e-mail addresses. We pride ourselves on being available for customers, so drop us a line, anytime!

Just a reminder: The finalists in the GreenCine Online Film Festival, presented by DivX, are up and available for download in secure DivX format through June 26. Watch. Rate. Repeat. Spread the word. We also recommend reading our DivX FAQ.

Congratulations to the winners of several recent GreenCine Trivia Contests: winners of the Appleseed contest were kinsugi, BJLouie and Vi3wer (the answer was The Boom Boom Satellites); winners of the Bob Newhart Show contest were RHorsman and stookey (the answer was Tom Poston); and the winners of the Frank Sinatra contest were solar66 and lulufaye (the answer was Rocky Graziano). Meanwhile, our next trivia contest giveaway is now up on the GreenCine home page: X-Files Mythology: Abudction, which will be followed by a nifty film noir collection contest on Friday. Try 'em both!

Thanks to all who tooned in to our Animated Exposure screening last week, introduced by Microcinema International curator/founder Joel S. Bachar, at San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center. Our next YBC screening will be on July 6, when we present the Documentary Grand Prize winner of that there GreenCine Online Film Festival. More details to come!

We recommend viewing this newsletter in all of its HTML glory; check your e-mail program's settings to view HTML. This newsletter is sent to GreenCine members only. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter in the future, log in to the GreenCine site, click "View Your Profile" then click Edit Profile. Choose "no" on the "Subscribe to the GreenCine newsletter" option and click "Update Profile."

Posted by cphillips at 4:10 PM

June 1, 2005

Dispatch #84

We hereby commence the inclusion of our weekly newsletter, "The Dispatch," right here on this blog, archived for your reading pleasure. The Dispatch monthly archives will be the place to go in case you missed any of our weekly recaps of all the new VOD and DVD releases, tips on the latest articles, staff picks, service highlights and more. So without further ado...

#84 | June 1, 2005:

"I'd like to have your advice on how to live comfortably without working hard."
-- Rebecca.

"Yeah, that'll happen."
-- Ghost World.

We held onto this issue of the GreenCine Dispatch a bit longer so you could be the first to hear: We proudly announce the finalists in the DivX Presents the GreenCine Online Film Festival! The finalists in the Narrative Competition are: IPO (2004); Peep Show (2004); Red Cockroaches (2004); Security (2005) (World Premiere); and White Knuckles (2004). Finalists in the Documentary Competition are: About Baghdad (2004); Empire of Juramidam (2004); The End of Suburbia (2004); Piece by Piece (2004); and Visiting Shane (2005) (World Premiere). Go to each film's individual page for more detailed information and to download them in the secure DivX format to watch in the comfort of your own home. We extend hearty congratulations to each of the finalists, as fine a crop of films as we could have hoped for. The Festival runs through June 26.

The work of Adam Curtis - specifically, two episodes of his Pandora's Box, Goodbye Mrs. Ant and The Brink of Eternity - will be screened this week at the Green Screen Film Festival in San Francisco. As a follow-up to David D'Arcy's interview, focusing on The Power of Nightmares, Hannah Eaves, Jonathan Marlow and Tom Luddy talk to Curtis about his unique approach to storytelling.

Here's a little-known fact: Rob Nilsson (pictured at left) is the first American director to win both the Camera d'Or at Cannes and the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance. On the occasion of the world premiere of his newest film, Security, in the GreenCine Online Film Festival, Nilsson spoke to us about his fiercely independent career, spanning nearly thirty years.

At the GreenCine Daily, our award-winning film blog: Serious linkage to film reviews, film commentary, features, festivals, and Fassbinder.

Video-on-Demand: Picture This (1992).

GreenCine's got a VOD and DVD double-feature idea for you: Watch the documentary Picture This, which peeks back at Peter Bogdanovich's classic The Last Picture Show and pair that with a viewing of the original film. Picture This, thoughtfully directed by veteran documentary filmmaker George Hickenlooper, makes for a fine companion piece, and gives fans of the original more of a sense of closure than found in the sequel Texasville. The original film still stands up as one of the finest dramas from the 1970s; bolstered by a terrific cast and beautiful black and white cinematography by Robert Surtees, the film deftly balances pathos and comedy so skillfully you'll understand why it single-handedly built up Bogdonavich's reputation so high he was never really able to match it. Viewing the documentary, appropriately subtitled "The Times of Peter Bogdanovich in Archer City, Texas," one gets the sense of how the film almost caused the director to have a nervous breakdown - in addition to myriad personal crises the director and the book's author Larry MacMurtry had to manage with locals feeling a little dubious the film would show them in anything but a stereotypical light. Hickenlooper includes interviews with a good portion of the principals involved both in front of and behind the cameras, and "delivers a solid hour-long documentary, and one that offers a few surprises between the fascinating conversations." (Apollo Film Guide) Add The Last Picture Show to your queue, and watch Picture This anytime you want via GreenCine's Video-on-Demand service.

GreenCine Staff Pick of the Week: Youth of the Beast (1963).

Straight outta Tokyo, this movie kicks some serious a** - Youth of the Beast (Yaju no seishun) is hard-boiled "pulp fiction" Japanese style. And yet even with a crisp Criterion Edition disc, Seijun Suzuki's essential, and absolutely over the top, film remains relatively obscure. Youth of the Beast is not quite the Yakuza masterpiece that Suzuki's Branded to Kill is (mostly due to a weaker storyline), but it's so highly stylized you may hardly care: Colorful and flashy as all get out, dynamically edited, and with a jazzy score, the film was pretty extraordinary for its time, practically avant garde, even. Has film noir ever looked so bright? The disc's extras are few, though an illuminating interview with the director is worthy, but most importantly, it looks and sounds as sharp as one could hope. -- Craig Phillips

A small but terrific bunch of films highlight this week's new DVD releases:

Jules et Jim (1962). More than the quintessential ménage à trois, more even than François Truffaut's best film, as many would argue, Jules et Jim is also quite simply one of the greatest films ever made. Its influence so immeasurable, in fact, that people watching it now forget that many of Truffaut's vivacious techniques that seem so familiar appeared here for the first time. Criterion releases an extras-packed double-disc edition, but the highlight is surely the new hi-def digital transfer supervised by DP Raoul Coutard.

Mandabi (1968). The first of two releases this week from Sengalese director Ousmane Sembene, most recently celebrated for his Moolaadé, Mandabi was the first he shot in the Wolof language, a gesture which, as Sam Adams notes in the Philadelphia City Paper, is "itself a powerful declaration of postcolonial independence." Though the film "positively explodes with color" and "shifts from stark melodrama to mordant comedy," Adams nonetheless notes that all these years on, the film still "has a sad timelessness, especially given the international focus on financial aid as the solution to all Africa's ills. 'As for the country, we'll change it,' one man declares, a promise as heady as it is daunting."

Then there's Xala (1975). "Widely regarded as Sembene's finest achievement, Xala is a cutting morality tale that equally blames the corruption of Senegal's sociopolitical environment on Euro-centricity and African auto-destruction," writes Ed Gonzalez in Slant. "You'd be hard pressed to find a filmmaker this critical of the political powers-that-be that threaten their fellow people's livelihoods."

East of Eden (1962). "At the time of [James] Dean's death, exactly one of the three movies he had starred in had been released," wrote Terrence Rafferty recently in the New York Times, "and in that film, Elia Kazan's East of Eden, "he had, for many viewers, incarnated the very essence of youth, its torments and confusions." And why, for Film Threat's Brad Laidman is it "his best film and most electric performance"? "It helps that he acts his ass off here, but the fact that he is achingly beautiful doesn't hurt either." Bonus disc.

Zero Patience (2003). "If silence equals death, Zero Patience is not about to succumb anytime soon," wrote Rita Kempley in the Washington Post way back in 1994. "A screamer of an AIDS musical from writer-director John Greyson, the film sets out to debunk scientific theories on the origin of the disease."

Vibrations / Fluctuations / Submission (1967-1970). A sexploitation triple bill beginning with Vibrations (1967), of which IMDb user "goblinhairedguy" writes, "This middle-period [Joseph] Sarno opus concentrates more than usual on the erotic scenes and heaving breasts, and for once probably satisfied the raincoat crowd as much as puzzling them. For fans of the auteur, there's plenty of psychological intensity and moral irony, as well as a neat jazzy organ score - like Fassbinder, Sarno was continually recombining his major themes and stylistic tropes in clever new variations." Fluctuations was directed in 1970 by one Joel Landwehr, Submission in 1969 by Allen Savage. Evidently.

Samurai Champloo. Volume 3. (2004): "This is from Shinichiro Watanabe, also responsible for the wildly popular Cowboy Bebop," notes ahogue. "Far as I can tell you won't go wrong watching something with his name on it. It's just good fun, really."

If you're thinking about downloading the aforementioned finalists in the GreenCine Online Film Festival, and we hope you are, we recommend reading our DivX FAQ first. While our panel of judges work towards the selection of the two Grand Prize winners, you can participate in the voting for the Audience Award, through June 26. We thank you, and the filmmakers thank you, too.

Congratulations to the winners of several recent GreenCine Trivia Contests: winners of the Amityville Collection contest were castar, kolohe61 and MDinkins (the answer was Lalo Schifrin); winners of the Kinsey contest were SGraves and reiermann (the answer was John Lithgow). Meanwhile, our next trivia contest giveaway will be up on the GreenCine home page this Friday; check it out for your chance to win a copy of the classic British sci-fi series The Tomorrow People on DVD.

Tonight! GreenCine presents Animated Exposure, introduced by Microcinema International curator/founder Joel S. Bachar. Microcinema International began its ongoing short film and video series, Independent Exposure, in 1996. Since then, it has presented over 1,300 shorts by filmmakers from around the world and has screened work to audiences in forty-three countries. This program will be a special animated anniversary tour through ten years of Independent Exposure, a retrospective featuring a diverse collection of films utilizing a variety of animation styles. Tonight, Wednesday, June 1, 7:30pm at the Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco. $8/$5 GreenCine and YBCA Members, Students, Seniors.

Meanwhile, we'd also like to plug a fine upcoming event, at which one of our own, Jonathan Marlow, will be speaking:

The Filmmaker Program: Do you have a candy gut from craft services? Are your eyes glazed over from editing on an Avid? Did your significant other threaten you to finish your movie or else? Yes, you're an independent filmmaker. Well, what now? How about coming to the Filmmaker Program in Las Vegas, where one out of three films attending have found distribution. It can happen for you, too. The Marketplace Table is a way for you to show your product and interact directly with video retailers, acquisitions and studio executives, while the Showcase Catalog gets your film in the hands of those retailers and executives. The program is $95.00 and runs July 26-28; registration deadline is June 30th.

We recommend viewing this newsletter in all of its HTML glory; check your e-mail program's settings to view HTML. This newsletter is sent to GreenCine members only. If you do not wish to receive this newsletter in the future, log in to the GreenCine site, click "View Your Profile" then click Edit Profile. Choose "no" on the "Subscribe to the GreenCine newsletter" option and click "Update Profile."

Posted by cphillips at 11:27 PM