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The Criterion Channel’s March 2024 Lineup

On the Channel

Feb 14, 2024

The Criterion Channel’s March 2024 Lineup
Cocktail

The Criterion Channel’s March 2024 Lineup

On the Channel

Feb 14, 2024

This March, get ready to say, “I can’t believe that’s on Criterion!” Our salute to the Golden Raspberry Awards collects some of the most notorious films singled out by Razzie voters as the worst of their respective years—including both camp delights and unjustly pilloried bombs now reclaimed as modern classics. In Living the Part, we trace an influential style of acting that evolved out of the Method and saw stars seek to transform themselves into their characters. Isabella Rossellini undergoes some outlandish transformations herself in Green Porno, a brilliantly bonkers series of biology lessons and the first in an array of the actor-turned-filmmaker’s resourceful and curious inquiries into the animal world. There’s so much more to choose from this month, including a spotlight on snarling starlet Jane Russell, bold experimental work by the Sankofa Film and Video Collective, the exclusive premiere of Claire Simon’s acclaimed documentary Our Body, Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Oscar-winning Drive My Car, and the complete directorial work of Japanese screen legend Kinuyo Tanaka.

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* indicates programming available only in the U.S.

TOP STORIES

And the Razzie Goes to . . .

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Every year, the Golden Raspberry Awards (a.k.a. the Razzies) honor the “worst” in contemporary cinema. Yet in doing so, they have often inadvertently shed light on films so out-there, so uncompromising, so beyond the bounds of accepted “good” taste that they demand attention. While some infamous Razzie winners like Xanadu, Barb Wire, and Gigli live on as classics of camp and cult, others, like Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate, Elaine May’s Ishtar, and Paul Verhoeven’s Showgirls have been reclaimed as fearlessly ambitious expressions of personal vision. In a topsy-turvy way, this program pays tribute to those divisive films that continue to fascinate and provoke debate, while calling into question the very line that separates high and low culture.

FEATURING: Cruising (1980), Heaven’s Gate (1980), Xanadu (1980)*, Querelle (1982), Under the Cherry Moon (1986), Ishtar (1987), Cocktail (1988), Showgirls (1995), Barb Wire (1996)*, The Blair Witch Project (1999), Freddy Got Fingered (2001), Swept Away (2002), Gigli (2003), The Wicker Man (2006)

Living the Part

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Featuring a new introduction by Isaac Butler, author of The Method: How the Twentieth Century Learned to Act

Extreme diets, elaborate prosthetics, uncannily convincing (and sometimes less so) accents: the late twentieth century witnessed the rise of a new strain of screen acting that saw stars deploy extensive research, long preparation processes, and often staggering physical transformations to create their characters. Inspired in part by Robert De Niro’s work in the 1970s, these performers sought to live within the very skin of their characters and render them with operatic intensity. Bringing together key performances from actors like De Niro (Raging Bull), Meryl Streep (Sophie’s Choice), Jeffrey Wright (Basquiat), and Joaquin Phoenix (The Master)—as well as an essential showcase for chameleonic precursor Lon Chaney (The Unknown) and several films that comment on the transformational potentials and pitfalls of acting—this program surveys a major shift in film art that continues to inspire both acclaim and controversy.

FEATURING: The Unknown (1927), Cruising (1980), Raging Bull (1980), Sophie’s Choice (1982), Basquiat (1996), I’m Not There (2007)*, My Week with Marilyn (2011)*, The Master (2012)*, Kate Plays Christine (2016)

Starring Jane Russell

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Jane Russell belongs to Hollywood’s golden age, but there remains something startlingly modern and subversive about her persona—maybe it’s her signature snarl, which allured studio magnates like Howard Hughes as much as it intimidated them. Initially making a splash as a provocative pin-up, she soon proved herself a charismatic and sharp-witted performer whose mix of brassy toughness and down-to-earth likability made her one of the most popular stars of the 1940s and ’50s, enlivening everything from the offbeat noir Macao to the irresistible musical comedy Gentlemen Prefer Blondes to the punchy melodrama The Revolt of Mamie Stover with her wry and knowing presence.

FEATURING: Macao (1952), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), The Tall Men (1955), The Revolt of Mamie Stover (1956)

Green Porno+

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Featuring a new introduction by Isabella Rossellini, part of Criterion’s Meet the Filmmaker series

Ever wondered about the sadomasochistic sex lives of snails? Or about the cannibalistic maternal instincts of hamsters? Wonder no more, for the one and only Isabella Rossellini explains it all in these singularly strange and delightful short films that combine science, performance art, and DIY puppetry to illuminate the intimate, unexpected oddities of the natural world. Across a trio of acclaimed series—Green Porno, Seduce Me, and Mammas—Rossellini enacts the animal kingdom’s most surprising habits and rituals for a surreal biology course unlike any other. They’re presented alongside her other recent work as a filmmaker, which further grapples with the animal kingdom by exploring Darwin’s theory of evolution.

SERIES: Green Porno (2008–2009), Seduce Me (2010), Mammas (2013)

FEATURES: Animals Distract Me (2011)

SHORTS: Darwin, What? (2020), Darwin, What? What? (2020), Fox Film (2020)

EXCLUSIVE PREMIERES

Our Body

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Timely, intimate, and deeply empathetic, Our Body observes the everyday operations of the gynecological ward in a public hospital in Paris. In the process, veteran documentarian Claire Simon questions what it means to live in a woman’s body, filming the diversity, singularity, and beauty of patients at all stages of life. We see cancer screenings and fertility appointments, a teenager dealing with an unwanted pregnancy, a trans woman considering the beginnings of menopause. The specific fears, desires, and struggles of these individuals illuminate the health challenges we all face—even, as it comes to pass, the filmmaker herself.

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