village voice
RSS/Podcast feed for Village Voice News Status Ain't Hood
Eerie Misanthropic Wednesday
City Gourmet
Win an Office Party from City Gourmet Eatery!
Latino Poets Society
Enter for your chance to win tickets to The Latino Poet’s Society Spoken Word Tour at The Cherry Lane Theater in Greenwich Village!
Jammin' with Jazz at Lincoln Center
Win admission for two to one performance at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola, New York’s hottest jazz club, plus a collection of jazz CDs and more!
Bash'd
Enter to win tickets to a performance of Bash'd: A Gay Rap Opera!
Film
The Cine Phile
Ed Lachman, Chameleon, at BAM
Plus: Peter Hutton at MOMA
by J. Hoberman
May 6th, 2008 12:00 AM

Ed Lachman, who turns 60 this year, is a cameraman with brand-name chops but no fixed style—he invents one according to the needs of each project or, maybe, the zeitgeist. The Harvard-educated son of a movie-theater owner, Lachman apprenticed himself to a succession of great European cinematographers during the '70s, then made his reputation in the '80s imbuing a series of postpunk U.S. indies and quasi-indies with the look du jour: Ulli Lommel's Blank Generation (1980), Susan Seidelman's Desperately Seeking Susan (1985), David Byrne's True Stories (1986), Marek Kanievska's Less Than Zero (1987), and Paul Schrader's Light Sleeper (1991) would all be lesser films without Lachman's rich electric palette.

In addition to these, BAM's 12-film retro, "The Cinematography of Ed Lachman," features Lachman's two movies for Todd Haynes—the amazingly faux-Technicolor Far From Heaven (2002) and last year's multi-stylistic tour de force, I'm Not There—as well as a pair of films that Lachman either directed or co-directed. Songs for Drella (1990)—showing with Werner Herzog's short paean to American auctioneers, How Much Wood Would a Woodchuck Chuck (1976)—documents Lou Reed and John Cale's performance of their Andy Warhol concept album at BAM. Opening the series is the legendary and never-released teen skateboard drama, Ken Park (2002). Lachman, who co-directed with the king of the sensationalist youth film, Larry Clark, will be present for a post-screening Q&A. May 9 through 20, BAM.

Another master cameraman, Peter Hutton spent the last 30-something years bringing motion pictures back to the moment when the Lumière brothers invented the medium. Hutton's films—silent, voluptuously monochromatic, largely devoid of camera movement and montage—suggest sketchbooks or photographic albums. This contemplative, sensuous cinema, now on exhibition at MOMA, has largely been defined by places—the images that the filmmaker gathered in Northern California and Southeast Asia while living as a hippie and working as a merchant seaman. Hutton's three-part New York Portrait (shot mainly in the late '70s and early '80s) is the most elusive and melancholy of city symphonies; he's also made wonderfully atmospheric studies of Budapest and Lodz.

Urban loneliness was eventually supplanted by an identification with the natural world. Living in the Hudson Valley, Hutton took that landscape—the inspiration for America's first major school of indigenous painters—as his own in his '90s films: In Titian's Goblet, Study of a River, and Time and Tide. Two Rivers (2001-2) juxtaposes the Hudson and the Yangtze. Hutton's most recent film, At Sea (2004-7), is as close as he's ever come to narrative—taking as its subject the biography of a giant container ship. Through May 26, MOMA.

More The Cine Phile
1968: The Year of Living Dangerously
A look back at a year when the whole world was watching

Mickey One at MOMA
Kicking off an ambitious five-month jazz series

Poland's Greatest Cult Film Returns
Blow Your Mind at BAM

Southland Tales Again: No Direction Home
Don't expect clarification on the DVD

Micheaux and Williams: Titans of 'Race' Cinema
At Anthology, silents and talkies that countered Griffith

Add a Comment

Not ? Login as a different user.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By submitting a comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms of Use.

Login or Register

Login or register to have a chance to win Free Stuff, subscribe to newsletters and much more!

Login Register


The Village Voice Ad Index
The Village Voice Guide To Atlantic City

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Summer Guide 2008

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Summer 2008 Education Supplement

» click here to see more...

The Village Voice Spring Arts Supplement

» click here to see more...