Tuesday, March 27, 2012

S.O.S. – The Titanic Centenary


At BFI Southbank in April 2012
 
April 2012 marks the centenary of the tragic sinking of the Titanic along with the loss of 1,517 passengers. The intervening years and countless tales of heroism to emerge from the disaster have caused the event to gain near mythical status in film and television; the distinct lack of footage from either the disaster and of the ship prior to its departure only fuelling the intrigue. BFI Southbank gathers together many of the filmed dramatisations of the disaster for a commemorative season that spans interpretations of the event from Britain, (Atlantic 1929, A Night to Remember 1958) and the US (Titanic 1953) via a unique take on the disaster from the propaganda machine of Nazi era Germany (Titanic 1943).
 
Other highlights of the centenary are set to include an exclusive preview of ITV’s upcoming series, Titanic (2012), written by Julian Fellowes followed by a Q&A with the writer, director and cast members that will kick of BFI’s celebrations on 20 March, the newly re mastered version of James Cameron’s Blockbuster Titanic 3D (2012) opening at BFI IMAX on April  5, an illustrated lecture from author Join Charles Barr on Alfred Hitchcock’s abandoned Titanic Project, a specially curatedMediateque collection and a Mezzanine display marking the event.
 
Shortly before midnight on 14 April 1912, the maiden voyage of the White Star Line’s beacon of luxury and progress, RMS Titanic, ended in tragedy when she struck an iceberg and sank in the early hours of 15 April. Less than a third of the vast liner’s passengers and crew survived, prompting international outrage. A century later, this unprecedented maritime catastrophe maintains its grim fascination, not least for generations of filmmakers drawn into the tangled web of fact and fiction now firmly embedded in our popular culture.
 
The earliest newsreel reactions to the tragedy embraced poetic license from the off, piecing together the story for a public now hungry for the moving image in ingenious, if morally rather suspect, ways. Lavish dramas immortalised the putative heroes and villains of April 1912, from the rich and famous (John Jacob Astor IV, ‘Unsinkable’ Molly Brown Bruce Ismay) to the humbler likes of Wireless Operator Jack Phillips and his Captain, Edward J Smith.
 
While Rank’s A Night to Remember (1958) remains for many the definitive screen portrayal, the Titanic canon encompasses, among others, an almost forgotten multi-language epic (Atlantic, 1929), a 1943 Nazi propaganda vehicle championed by Goebbels, and James Cameron’s 1997 box office behemoth (now re-launched in 3D, naturally), not forgetting IMAX explorations of the wreck and a legion of documentaries unpicking the minutiae of the sinking and myriad conspiracy theories. Two major new mini-series produced to coincide with this anniversary offer a reminder that among the defining events of the 20th century, the Titanic endures as the most potent symbol of man’s fallibility - and the cinematic lure of the sea.
 
TV Preview: Titanic + Q&A
Deep Indigo-Sienna Films-Mid Atlantic Films-Lookout Point-ITV Studios 2012. Dir Jon Jones. With Linus Roache, Celia Imrie, Toby Jones, Geraldine Somerville, Maria Doyle Kennedy. Episode One: 46min
As we look towards our Titanic season in April, we present this new production, written by Oscar-winning screenwriter Julian Fellowes. Titanic is the extraordinary re-telling of that doomed voyage, weaving action, mystery and romantic narratives featuring fictional and historical characters, before coming together in an explosive finale. While James Cameron’s 1997 film was primarily a love story between the two central characters, BAFTA-winning producer Nigel Stafford-Clark was inspired by the hundreds of untold stories of those aboard, and the drama provides a unique portrait of the society which gave birth to the liner, and which was heading as obliviously towards its own nemesis in 1914 as Titanic was towards its iceberg.
Screening followed by a panel discussion & Q&A with Julian Fellowes, producers Nigel Stafford-Clark and Simon Vaughan, director Jon Jones and cast members (check BFI website for panel confirmation). Presented in association with BAFTA Tickets £10, concs £6.75 (Members pay £1.50 less)
Tue 20 March 18:20 NFT1
 
Titanic 3D
An IMAX 3D Experience
USA 2012. Dir James Cameron.With Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane. 194min
James Cameron’s epic romance – set against the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic – launched the careers of DiCaprio and Winslet, broke boxoffice records and won 11 Academy Awards in 1998. The digital remastering from Super 35 to stunning IMAX 3D – supervised by Cameron himself – results in a larger aspect ratio than the original and is therefore best enjoyed on the biggest screen in Britain.
Opens 5 April
 
Atlantic
UK 1929. Dir EA Dupont. With Madeleine Carroll, Franklin Dyall, John Longden,Monty Banks, Donald Calthrop. 90min. PG
German émigré Dupont followed silent classic Piccadilly with a costly sound adaptation of Ernest Raymond’s 1915 play The Berg. A thinly-veiled retelling of the Titanic disaster – direct reference to which was forbidden by the White Star Line –Atlantic is something of a curate’s egg. Among the earliest British sound films and the first produced in multiple languages (English, German, and later French), this all-but-forgotten entry in the Titanic canon boasts spectacular sets and a gripping finale.
*Introduced by season curator Simon McCallum; **Extended introduction by Archive curator John Oliver
Wed 11 Apr 20:40 NFT3*
Sun 15 Apr 16:00 NFT2**
 
The Debris Field - Salvaging the Titanic in Word, Sound and ImageThe Debris Field is a new multi-media production written and performed by poets Simon Barraclough, Isobel Dixon and Chris McCabe. The evocative poetic text is accompanied by original music from Oli Barrett of Bleeding Heart Narrative, and film by Jack Wake-Walker. The poets will take you on a resonant tour of the cultural debris of this iconic event, exploring ideas of luxury and labour; courage and folly; life and loss; and human ambition in the face of nature’s power. A key historic event explored with striking poetic, musical and visual impact.
Sat 14 April 19.30pm The Blue Room £6
 
Titanic
Germany 1943. Dir Herbert Selpin [& Werner Klingler (uncred)]. With Sybille Schmitz, Hans Nielsen, Kirsten Heiberg, EF Fürbringer. 85min. EST
Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels casts a sinister shadow over this budget-busting production, almost as troubled as the disaster it depicts from its fervently anti-British perspective (complete with fictional German hero). Original director Selpin died in custody after failing to toe the party line; Goebbels eventually banned the film entirely. UFA star Sybille Schmitz was shunned as a collaborator, her sad decline inspiring Fassbinder’s Veronika Voss (1982).
+ In Nacht und Eis
Germany 1912. Dir Mime Misu. With Ernst Rückert, Otto Rippert, Waldemar Hecker. c36min. With live piano Accompaniment
The earliest surviving dramatisation of the Titanic tragedy, thought lost until its rediscovery in the 1990s and restored by the Deutsche Kinemathek.
Wed 18 Apr 18:20 NFT2
Wed 25 Apr 20:30 NFT2
 
Titanic
USA 1953. Dir Jean Negulesco. With Clifton Webb, Barbara Stanwyck,
Robert Wagner, Brian Aherne, Thelma Ritter. 97min. PG
Surprisingly it took some four decades for the Titanic story to get the full Hollywood treatment. Thankfully audiences were in safe hands with co-writer Charles Brackett (awarded the 1953 Academy Award for Best Story & Screenplay), and the indomitable Barbara Stanwyck as a first-class passenger fleeing her selfish socialite husband (Webb). Will he redeem himself in Titanic’s hour of need? Look out, too, for Thelma Ritter in a Molly Brown inspired supporting role.
Introduced by an Archive curator
Tue 24 Apr 20:40 NFT2
Sat 28 Apr 18:40 NFT2
 
A Night to Remember
UK 1958. Dir Roy Ward Baker. With Kenneth More, Ronald Allen, Robert Ayres, Honor Blackman. 123min. New digital restoration. PG.
For many filmgoers and historians, A Night to Remember has never been bettered in its exciting yet heavily researched recreation of the Titanic’s fate. Based on Walter Lord’s book, the film moves the focus from first class by drawing on the experiences of crewmen like Second Officer Charles Lightoller (a landmark role in More’s career) and exposing the rigid class structure that shaped events before and after the fatal collision. Haunting moments – children’s toys sliding eerily, crockery crashing to the floor – superbly evoke the simple human horror of that freezing night.
Mon 16 Apr 20:20 NFT2
Introduced by John Graves, National Maritime Museum
Fri 13 – Sat 28 Apr Studio & NFT3
See calendar for times
 
Special Event:
Hitchcock’s Titanic Project
Join Charles Barr (author of English Hitchcock and the BFI Film Classic on Vertigo) for this unique presentation, shedding light on the Titanic film which was to have been Hitchcock’s first Hollywood assignment in 1939 before Selznick replaced it with Rebecca. Hitchcock had described it as a ‘marvellously dramatic subject for a motion picture’; a specially edited sequence draws upon shipboard extracts from his other films in order to show ‘what might have been’. This event marks the Titanic centenary and looks ahead to the BFI’s major project for later in 2012, The Genius of Hitchcock.
Wed 11 Apr 18:20 NFT3

ALL NEW PEOPLE

Zach Braff (star of TV sitcom Scrubs) transfers his self-penned debut theatrical play to the London West End after a brief run on Broadway in early Autumn of last year.  Only this time, Braff is taking the lead role of Charlie, previously performed by Justin Bartha (The Hangover).
 
When we first encounter Charlie, he is smoking a cigarette whilst standing on a chair with a noose around his neck.  Charlie is at his lowest ebb, he is about to commit suicide.  And then there is a knock at the door, and Charlie's plans to a turn for the better.
 
Emma (Eve Myles -Torchwood) is a British girl attempting to sell the beach house for the summer, the beach house Charlie says belongs to his parents.  Emma initially wants to ask Charlie why he wants to kill himself, yet he is reluctant to be close to anyone.
 
Emma calls in reinforcements, Myron (Paul Hilton) a fireman who is also the local drug dealer who joins the slowly growing party.  The third knock at the door presents a prostitute, Kim (Susannah Fielding) who is a gift to Charlie from an old friend in Manhattan.
 
Set in the bleak midwinter of Long Island, the cold and bitterness of the outside elements try to exact upon the people inside this one set play.  Braff has written a play that is at times laugh out loud funny and at times quite gripping with the emotional pull nearly the end of the conclusion.
 
Braff's play revolves around the fear of something to the central character (in the same vein of Neil Simon or Woody Allen, those other Jewish doyen writers), in this respect it is about Charlie's fear of growing older as he has hit the 35 year old milestone.  He has a stressful job as an air-traffic controller and his lapse into philosophical thinking at the desk led to the death of six people due to his mistake.


Charlie also has a fear of being alone, yet he is quick to shun away any attention he receives from his three visitors (they can be considered ghostly; the prostitute represents his past, Myron his here and now and Emma the possibility of future - a debt to Dickens perhaps).  The vigour and unexpectedness of the three guests leads to a wave of profanity in a plea for privacy, yet only once does he calm down does the comedy come out of the character's themselves, once we get over the initial set up of preventing Charlie's suicide.  The play morphs from a situation comedy to that of one driven by character.


The ending although slightly ambigious, can be deemed to be relatively happy for all concerned considering the real-time events that have taken place previously.


Braff is having fun with the format, and you can see the time he spent watching each performance in New York has paid dividends - Charlie whilst being the reason we are here, is the straight man of the piece - the best lines are reserved for Hilton and Fielding, in characters that could have been one-dimensional yet projected into something else.  Braff also delights in destroying the set - cornflakes, broken glasses, a broken art display lay strewn over the stage by the end; he also has a good ear for a joke, such as the running gag of him booby-trapping the apartment like Home Alone.  That joke works, because Braff is writing as a man who remembers how big that film was and the cultural significance of the work on the audience he is writing for.  The audience is mostly all 20-40 year old white anglo-saxons who are enjoying the fact they are seeing a famous sitcom character in the flesh.


However, if you expect anything resembling the manic frenzy of a Scrubs episode, you shall be severely disappointed.


Braff has a real presence on stage, never over-reaching for our attachment to his character; yet his work as writer is the star here. For acting plaudits, you need to look at the supporters - all have a dark secret and they all act their socks off.  Myles shows she has bones for comedy, Fielding gives her bimbo blonde a neat twist but Hilton, a RSC veteran, is amazing in his role as the cyncial Myron; he is having fun with Braff's words giving different connotations to the words on the page with real panache.


All New People is a debut theatrical work by a special talent; go see it for an engaging night out in the West End that is not a musical and is not a farce.
 
It runs at the Duke of York's Theatre on St. Martins Lane, for a strict 10 week run from 22nd February. 


http://duke-of-yorks.official-theatre.co.uk/
www.allnewpeople.co.uk