Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

The Connection (1961)

Posted By: ChaosmoZ
The Connection (1961)

The Connection (1961)
AVI | English - USA | Subtitles : not found | length : 1:42:16 | 584 Mb
MPEG-4 Video (DX50) – 720x544 – 799 Kbit/s | MS ADPCM audio (ms) 354 Kbit/s – 44kHz - Mono
Imdb rating: 7.0/10 (134 votes)

Directed by : Shirley Clarke
Written by : Jack Gelber (also play)
Genre : drama
Color : Black & white
Starring : Warren Finnerty, Garry Goodrow, Carl Lee, William Redfield, Jerom Raphel, Jim Anderson, Barbara Winchester
Music by : Freddy Redd

The Connection depicts the same type of angel-headed hipsters that Kerouac coloured his books with, and is set in a one-room tenement where junkies, musicians, and other dudes await the arrival of the Cowboy. The Cowboy is their “Connection” who will provide them with their heroin fix. All the while, Clarke shows us a documentary filmmaker who wants to capture the hip scene encouraging his subjects to just “act naturally” in front of the camera. Like many other filmmakers and artists of the period, “acting naturally” is the key to Clarke’s work. In letting it all hang out, a new aesthetic seemed to sprout.
Clarke based The Connection on a Jack Gelber play of the same name, which was performed at the historic Living Theater in New York. Full of jump-cuts, sloppy camera-handling, and improvised dialogue, The Connection serves as a reminder that filmmaking can maintain an intoxicating chaos in spite of the very rigid technical limitations of the medium. The film may be short on plot and character development, but is technically innovative and reminds the viewer of the unlimited potential of cinema.
While Clarke was a highly innovative filmmaker on the level of experimental, cinematic virtuosos such as John Cassavettes and influential cinema verité practitioners such as the Maysles Brothers and D. A. Pennebaker, she undeservedly received less notoriety. Clarke shows an adept hand at jazz-like constructions of image and sound and the film’s recreation of a junkie haze is as intense as anything you’re likely to encounter from that era.
Clarke was a dancer and choreographer before she delved into cinema, and she has often been quoted as saying that her films were “a choreography of images”. The Connection is often a rambling, chaotic display of debauchery and suffers from over-hip pretensions. However, the wrangling of wild, spontaneous footage into a semi-cohesive form while still maintaining its authenticity and molding a narrative is what Clarke’s film pulls off.
Among some of the most memorable characters in the film are the sarcastic Leach, played convincingly by Warren Finnerty, and the super-cool Carl Lee as Cowboy. However, Clarke manages to elicit solid performances from all of the ensemble. The film quietly jangles the nerves as the characters descend into withdrawal.
Clarke’s film depicts a generation who seeks drugs and alcohol to assuage feelings of disillusionment. While certainly more objective than most social commentary, The Connection does have a social heartbeat. The dramatic situation it offers can be applied to a larger social context and lends itself to any number of interpretations about the hypocritical society that these characters inhabit. —sensesofcinema.com

The Connection (1961)


The Connection (1961)


The Connection (1961)


The Connection (1961)