Joanna Hogg, painterly, modernist Brit filmmaker utilizing static frames, uneasy vibes

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so class consciousness is a personal issue hmmm

ꙮ (map), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 20:58 (one year ago) link

I believe I've already run up against these issues with you in some other threads and my take is that this is not the only, or primary, metric against which the value of art should be measured.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 21:02 (one year ago) link

I wasn't baffled by Zelda Zonk's post -- I was baffled by the criticism upthread posted a couple years ago, which I reread this morning.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 21:49 (one year ago) link

I think it's an informative frame in thinking about art but doesn't have to be a dominant one. (Vaguely reminds me of some early response to Taylor Swift on ILM, basically "Who cares what a privileged affluent white girl thinks about anything?")

Hogg is certainly a chronicler of affluence and not a terribly critical one, at least in the sense that her critiques aren't of affluence per se. Though you could certainly argue that in her movies characters mostly use their privilege to try to hide from unhappiness/insecurities/alienation, and generally fail.

I guess I'm pretty taken with Hogg's by now three-part project: it's rare to see so many hours of film by a female writer-director about a budding female writer-director. I'll concede that we can't wave aside the class consciousness: who's paying the bills, who gets their project approved. I thought of Leonard Woolf giving Virginia money for her pens and paper. Her artistry and often her sanity depended on the small genuine kindnesses of a man, a lesser writer. She also inherited iirc some of her dad's $$ too. How a particular kind of 20th century female voice shaped by where they stood in the class structure and how much they got from male patrons strikes me as one of the Hogg Project's overtones.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 21:56 (one year ago) link

Afraid I was left pretty much unmoved by The Souvenir Part II, enjoyed it as I watched it but just felt I took nothing away at the end, it also felt like a piece of work in denial of its own privilege, so a bit self-indulgent, but if it connected with other people maybe that's not fair.

Camaraderie at Arms Length, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:20 (one year ago) link

Guess what it came down to for me was that for all the difficulties and sadness in her life, there was never real struggle. That's not the experience of 99% of people. I'm not saying every British filmmaker needs to be Ken Loach, but having no glimpse of the void of despair in a film featuring addiction and death just stops it having any real bite.

Camaraderie at Arms Length, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:28 (one year ago) link

Her love for that heroin-addicted Tory counts as struggle, no? And in the second film she wants the mostly male milieu to take her film seriously.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:30 (one year ago) link

I should add that I really like the Hogg films I've seen. And you can certainly read a class critique into them, most people will, but it seems Hogg herself doesn't really. I saw her first one, Unrelated, the other day, which definitely reads like a critique of a bunch of arrogant upper class Brits being unpleasant to each other and the Italian locals - but reading interviews with Hogg, she says it's not the way she sees it, she's simply focused on the travails of the 40something protagonist.

As for the Souvenirs, I like them for a lot of the reasons Alfred mentions. But I did find Julie's extreme privilege - which is way more than your average white middle class privilege - is something I needed to get past mentally before enjoying the film. It's not the same as Austen or Shakespeare, whose worlds are temporally and psychologically far removed from our own. Hogg is recreating a world that is pretty much the same as our own and in the lived experience of many, and then asks us to care about someone who has extraordinary and very untypical resources at her disposal to deal with her (very real) tragedy. That doesn't make the films bad, but it certainly begs questions.

Zelda Zonk, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:37 (one year ago) link

I haven't seen part 1, maybe I should. Don't think her struggle to get the film taken seriously was so much about the industry men (aside from a couple of scenes of course) but about her inability to communicate with her crew/classmates, which is something I could have been interested in, but it never really seemed to be dealt with.

Camaraderie at Arms Length, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:41 (one year ago) link

i don't think this film would make a lick of sense if you hadn't seen part 1.

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:42 (one year ago) link

Good post, Zelda.

Camaraderie, I'd say Richard Ayoade's Patrick is there to give Julie the necessary tension: gay and Black, certainly not privileged.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:43 (one year ago) link

I always like Richard Ayoade, and enjoyed his scenes, would have liked a lot more of him in there.

Should note that Jane Austin did not write a book about a young female writer from immense privilege trying to write a book and get it published with funding from her parents.

Camaraderie at Arms Length, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:45 (one year ago) link

But Austen, who lived at home, did write a novel about young rich people putting on a play!

I agree, though, her world is sci-fi to us.

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:48 (one year ago) link

I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm) at 10:42 27 Dec 22

i don't think this film would make a lick of sense if you hadn't seen part 1.
this is true.

should also add that I watched this with my wife, who has been living in the UK for six years now and is at this point almost physically disgusted with the upper-middle class.

Camaraderie at Arms Length, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:50 (one year ago) link

lol I hear ya

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 22:51 (one year ago) link

eleven months pass...

saw the eternal daughter. it was a lot of tilda swinton. a lot. too much really. and the pitch of the neurosis. again too much. tiring.

BUT there was a sort of howling mystery around it all that also gave it power. and it's just great to see someone making a film that references turn of the screw henry james (both the original story and the innocents), and They by Kipling is explicitly quoted, as it were. this is exactly in that mode, the psychological dominating the gothic. the haunting also v evident. the hotel receptionist is *amazing* as is Louis the dog.

Joanna Hogg's treatment of light, sound, weather, interiors and dress is masterly, just wonderful. it won't be a film to see on tv, where I suspect it will be too dark. it was very good to see, generally, the bedroom scenes properly grainy (it used to drive my parents mad that in most films when someone switched out the light, the bedroom suddenly became lighter than when it had been on. a necessary mechanic perhaps, but Hogg really works at the light levels.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 28 November 2023 21:27 (five months ago) link

it might in one reading be seen as a reverse turn of the screw/they tbh.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 28 November 2023 22:20 (five months ago) link

also, when someone else sees this - post here if you find it reasonable to say the shining is both an oblique but also obvious and slightly “wut?” reference point.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 28 November 2023 22:24 (five months ago) link

hi!

stuffing your suit pockets with cold, stale chicken tende (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 28 November 2023 22:25 (five months ago) link

: )

so, i mean im not sure if im being weird about this but the deployment of *kindly black man as hotel caretaker* was both hilariously obvious and also made me go “wait, what? why?”

Fizzles, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 08:05 (five months ago) link

I mentioned The Shining in my review, but thought this was kind of creaky tbh. Particularly the kindly old black guy’s eerie flute habit. Would make a good double bill with All Of Us Strangers though.

Piedie Gimbel, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 08:32 (five months ago) link

Creaky or total mess is what I've been circling around. But I quite *enjoyed* that it was trying to do a lot and especially that it was working in the gothic frame to test the deterioration of uppper middle class neurosis and grief, plugging in and reversing the children-as-revenants on guilt ridden parents. Although sometimes it felt like it all landed on the pastiche, with major concerns (death, ghosts) in service of the minor (manners).

It reminded me a bit of my reaction to Jen Calleja's novel Vehicle. I didn't think it was very good, at all really, but I was pleased that it existed and people were doing things in this vein, playing with the possibilities. What's the line from Annie Dillard? "The writer knows his field - what has been done, what could be done, the limits - the way a tennis player knows the court. ANd like that expert, he, too, plays the edges. That is where the exhilaration is. He hits up the edges. In writing, he can push the edges. Beyond this limit, here, the reader must recoil."

I think this film is probably in that latter space, but i'm pleased someone is testing the edges of it.

Still too much Tilda, even if the editing was impressive.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 09:35 (five months ago) link

the "two parts Hammer, one part Tales of the Unexpected" headline quote from Graun makes this sound appealing to me but somehow I don't think it will be an accurate summation of a J Hogg movie

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 29 November 2023 09:39 (five months ago) link

yeah, that's incorrect! the performance of Carly-Sophia Davies as the hotel receptionist is worth the admission price alone though!

Fizzles, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 11:14 (five months ago) link

In a strong month for dogs in movies (the mutts in Fallen Leaves and Anatomy of a Fall are v good too), Tilda’s springer spaniel may be the best.

Piedie Gimbel, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 12:42 (five months ago) link

iirc Kaurismaki was a good director of woofers in the other side of hope as well

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 29 November 2023 13:32 (five months ago) link

have been quietly stewing all afternoon over the level of critical idiocy reflected in that guardian quote, calz.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 29 November 2023 18:05 (five months ago) link

I haven't seen the movie yet but I thought that either is an absolute clunker of a headline quote or a radical departure for J Hogg, the former being the odds on fav!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Wednesday, 29 November 2023 18:22 (five months ago) link

Upthread I called it her slightest film, but I think of it a little more kindly now. It's audacious to do the third part of an autobiographical trilogy as a gothic ghost story, and it pays off nicely at the end.

The privilege discussion upthread puts me in mind of Sofia Coppola, who I think has a similarly ambiguous posture toward her privilege and the world she occupies.

a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 30 November 2023 03:29 (five months ago) link

Mentions of 'Hammer Horror' are almost always a sign of critical carelessness, especially in the Guardian.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 30 November 2023 09:48 (five months ago) link

two weeks pass...

my bf was so infuriated by an interview with tilda swinton's daughter that he now refuses to watch any movies by j hogg

plax (ico), Friday, 15 December 2023 15:04 (four months ago) link

Lol, got a link?

xyzzzz__, Friday, 15 December 2023 15:07 (four months ago) link

I read a graun interview with HSB and was bristling a fair bit at the smugness and nepo-brat quotient and all the usual shit (private school education, idyllic country house) but lol, despite this I'd still watch a Hogg movie!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Friday, 15 December 2023 17:31 (four months ago) link

This film added up to less than the sum of its parts, other than the aforementioned Carly-Sophia Davies. Maybe it needed more heaving bosoms, if it is indeed "two parts Hammer"?

SPOILER
SPOILER
SPOILER

Tilda seemed to be cured of her psychotic episode quite sharpish at the conclusion!

You have already voted in this poll and cannot vote again (Matt #2), Friday, 15 December 2023 17:46 (four months ago) link

I think this was it: https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/jan/23/honor-swinton-byrne-interview-souvenir-tilda-joanna-hogg

"“From what I understand, she couldn’t find Julie in these posey professional actresses who were very comfortable in front of a camera. She just said they’re all too pretty. And then she cast me. Which, you know, I took as a compliment,” says Swinton Byrne. She lets out a throaty laugh, wriggles her feet out of a pair of sparkly stilettos and snuggles herself more comfortably into a sofa at the upmarket central London hotel that is the base for her first solo publicity round, for the sequel to that first film."

plax (ico), Friday, 15 December 2023 20:02 (four months ago) link

Yer faither wid be proud

Free Ass Ange (Tom D.), Friday, 15 December 2023 20:05 (four months ago) link

that quote nails it!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Friday, 15 December 2023 20:35 (four months ago) link

idk I like the sass. American actors are reluctant to show it.

Thanks for that link plax, understand your bf's reaction.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 15 December 2023 21:42 (four months ago) link

This film added up to less than the sum of its parts, other than the aforementioned Carly-Sophia Davies. Maybe it needed more heaving bosoms, if it is indeed "two parts Hammer"?

SPOILER
SPOILER
SPOILER

Tilda seemed to be cured of her psychotic episode quite sharpish at the conclusion!



to that last point - it didn’t really manage to establish and deepen the mood. the whole thing felt skittish and febrile - nervous, neurotic energy, rather than a deepening sense of malevolent detachment. that makes sense in terms of what hogg was trying to do i think, but it’s the reverse of the normal direction (a form of unexamined normality, put into gradual but inescapable powers of morbidity and more or less tangible death, before coming out (or not) substantially changed. here the main character is deep deep beyond “the bourne from which there is no returning” and the film is a navigation out of it.

Fizzles, Sunday, 17 December 2023 12:25 (four months ago) link

Great comment.. Did the film need that malevolent detachment? Is that mode even Hogg's specialty?

right. it’s an interesting decision. i like that she tried it. not sure it worked.

Fizzles, Sunday, 17 December 2023 18:47 (four months ago) link


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