Ivan Dixonâs The Spook Who Sat by the Door (1973)
When Ephraim Asili (The Inheritance) selected and introduced The Spook Who Sat by the Door for the New York Film Festival in 2020, J. Hoberman wrote in the New York Times that âthis much-mythologized bombshell was conceived in fury, born in flames, and on its 1973 release, advertised as Americaâs ânightmare.ââ On Friday, the premiere of a new restoration will open Cinema, Restored, the Brooklyn Academy of Music series running through August 22, and Spook will then head to the Maysles Documentary Center for a weeklong run starting August 23.
Featuring an original score by Herbie Hancock, directed by actor Ivan Dixon (Nothing but a Man), and adapted from the 1969 novel by Sam Greenlee, Spook is âeffectively Black militant agitprop,â wrote Screen Slate founding editor Jon Dieringer a few years ago, âan incendiary and uncompromising cry to organize and fight whose radicality remains undiminished.â Dan Freeman (Lawrence Cook) is a social worker who becomes the C.I.A.âs token Black hire. After he leaves the Agency and returns to Chicago, he utilizes his training to organize a team of underground guerrilla fighters.
BAMâs Cinema, Restored program also features Dick Fontaineâs I Heard It Through the Grapevine (1982), which tracks James Baldwinâs journey through the U.S. in 1980. Moving from one landmark of the 1960s-era Civil Rights movement to the next, Baldwin catches up with friends and allies such as Amiri Baraka, Sterling Brown, and Chinua Achebe. Grapevine is âas much an essay as a documentary, with Baldwin a seemingly eager participant and coauthor of the work,â wrote Darren Hughes for Filmmaker last year. The film âgives lie to the comforting notion that suffering and sacrifice lead inevitably to justice and progress. Itâs a harsh truth, precisely and artfully rendered.â
Chronologically, BAMâs series begins with Jean Renoirâs The Rules of the Game (1939), which âstands above all other films,â Paul Schrader has said, âbecause, quite simply, it has it all. If one movie can stand for all others, represent all that film can be, that film is The Rules of the Game.â Dave Kehr has called Shadow of a Doubt (1943), starring Joseph Cotten as a serial murderer, Alfred Hitchcockâs âfirst indisputable masterpiece.â
When critic Adrian Martin first saw Terrence Malickâs Days of Heaven (1978), it struck him as something like âthe shotgun marriage of a Hollywood epic with an avant-garde poem.â Andrei Tarkovskyâs Nostalghia (1983) screened at BAM eleven years ago, and in the Village Voice,Alan Scherstuhl wrote that the film is âsteeped in some of the stiffest ennui of Tarkovskyâs career, even as he conjures images of surpassing beauty.â
In Mahjong (1996), Edward Yang âportrays mid-1990s Taipei as an unfettered new frontier where peopleâs wayward desires and newly deep pockets are ripe for exploitation,â wrote Vikram Murthi in the Nation earlier this year. âIf Mahjong resembles a messy crime comedy, thatâs because it acutely portrays Taiwan as a messy, violent clash of languages and competing ideologies, all undergirded by the noxious shadow of global capitalism.â
Writing about Mahjong for Screen Slate, Annabelle Johnston is especially intrigued by âthe tension between the public and private, the impossibility of individual relationships within networks of belonging that, while haphazard, are the backbone of film . . . Despite the outlandishness of the violence and exaggerated performances, this tenderness prevails.â
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