Isaki Lacuesta - Cravan vs. Cravan (2002)
97 min. | DivX 5.0 | 544x320 | 861 kb/s | PAL (25fps) | 133Kb/s MP3 VBR | 700 MB
Spanish, English, French (not or) | Subtitles: Castellano/English
97 min. | DivX 5.0 | 544x320 | 861 kb/s | PAL (25fps) | 133Kb/s MP3 VBR | 700 MB
Spanish, English, French (not or) | Subtitles: Castellano/English
"In Chris Marker and Yannick Bellon's Remembrance of Things to Come, a thoughtful and illuminating survey of Denis Bellon's photo-reportage between the two world wars, the filmmakers provide a framework for the interpretation of Bellon's artistically rendered, zeitgeist images as prescient, historical documents that, in hindsight, provide an insightful glimpse of the looming, profoundly transformative world events that would unfold at the first half of the twentieth century. However, in this subjective, often arbitrary process of contemporal assignment of the meaning of images, the intersection between logical deduction and extrapolation continues to be amorphous and untenable. In this cognitive processing of "history as prophesy", when does documentation end and mythification begin? This ambiguity lies at the core of Isaki Lacuesta's elegantly conceived essay film Cravan vs. Cravan on the enigma of Arthur Cravan - the legendary poet-boxer, Dadaist, writer, critic, eccentric, provocateur, editor of the notorious Left Bank cultural publication Maintenant (whose readership included such notable personalities as Ezra Pound, Maurice Ravel, Jean Cocteau, and Gertrude Stein), and nephew of famed Irish playwright and novelist Oscar Wilde who, in 1918, set alone on a boat off the coast of Mexico bound for Argentina to reunite with his expectant wife, poet Mina Loy, and disappeared.
Born Fabian Avenarius Lloyd in Lausanne, Switzerland, Cravan's early life would be marked, not only by the abandonment of his father soon after his birth, but also by the family's closely guarded silence over a quietly buried scandal involving the family's famous uncle (Wilde's imprisonment under homosexuality charges of gross indecency). Whether in search of a father figure, or simply fascinated by the sensation caused by the taboo circumstances that led to his uncle's downfall and marginalization during the final years of his life, Cravan would become obsessed with the idea of him, even reporting fabricated sightings and conversations in articles that would be carried by such reputable newspapers as The New York Times. But more importantly, this potent combination of celebrity and scandal may also be seen as a catalyst to Cravan's immersion in the avant-garde community of turn-of-the-century Paris, relishing his role as instigator, provocateur, and cultural critic who equally attracted the attention of Dadaists, Surrealists, Impressionists, Fauvists (most notably, his friendship with Kees Van Dongen), and especially the Futurists, whose aesthetic fascination with the speed and strength of mechanization not correlated favorably with the radicalism and bluntness of Cravan's writing, but in some ways, also personified the physical ideals of industrial machinery with his ruggedly handsome, charismatic, intimidating, and complex persona as a pugilist and intellectual.(…)"
"Moreover, in filming re-enactments and conducting personal interviews from the perspective of Frank Nicotra whose own unusual career trajectory as boxer turned filmmaker and writer (and occasional poet) bears more than a passing resemblance to that of Cravan, Lacuesta illustrates the often colliding interpenetration of documented reality and subjective memory, between creation and fabrication. This permeability of historical record may be seen in the controversial classification of Cravan as a painter, an attribution that, ironically, evolved from Cravan's practice of publishing under an array of pseudonyms, specifically, in his use of the name Edouard Archinard for an article in Maintenant that links him (whether validly or not) to a series of paintings by an obscure, turn of the century artist, Edouard Archinard (a connection that is dismissed by Cravan scholar and editor, María Luisa Borrás). Similarly, this historical distortion may be seen in Cravan's self-created celebrity, a penchant for fictionalization that is perhaps best exemplified by his instigated exhibition match in Barcelona with heavyweight boxing champion, Jack "Galveston Giant" Johnson (who, then plagued in America by controversy over his interracial relationships, sought refuge in France shortly after his second marriage), claiming several nebulous and unverifiable titles across Europe (including a purported match with an Olympic champion in Greece) in order to position himself as a valid contender. Sustained in the ring for six rounds only by Johnson himself who had consciously tried to prolong the fight as requested by the event's sponsors, Cravan was easily overpowered by the heavyweight champion, a defeat that would inevitably punctuate Cravan's departure from Europe and migration to New York City, once again turning to his cultivated associations with the European avant-gardists - a community increasingly in self-imposed exile from the Great War - this time, hosted by famed artist Marcel Duchamp (that led to his fateful encounter with Futurist muse and poet, Mina Loy).Acquarello at Filmref
Incorporating elements of biographic documentary, historical re-enactment, and essay film, Cravan vs. Cravan, too, invariably serves to reinforce the subject's inexhaustible sense of irreconcilable contradiction and self re-invention, in essence, orchestrating an elaborate semblance of real-life performance art that enabled - and continues to inspire - the very transfiguration of personal memory to public mythology. Concluding with the blurry, disintegrating archived footage of Cravan in the midst of his workout - perhaps for a boxing match - unfolding in slow speed, the degraded image encapsulates not only the elusiveness of Cravan's ephemeral (and often veiled) persona, but also the tenuous, often indefinable bounds that exist between the contextualization of a historical image and its signification."
More information at:
Neil Young's film lounge
IMDB
"Decía Tristan Tzara que todo era dadá y nada era dadá. Ésta no es una película dadá. Ésta es la historia de gentes que quieren ser otras gentes y que en efecto consiguen ser otros, aunque nunca los mismos que habían pretendido ser. Ésta es una película de ecos.
La primera evidencia con la que topé al comenzar este proyecto era la rotunda, irreversible imposibilidad de filmar a Cravan. Pero la testadurez humana no tiene límites. En el mismo instante en que Cravan desapareció, nacía el fantasma que le iba a sobrevivir y transportar hasta nuestros días. Si tiene que ser algo, cosa que dudo, "Cravan vs Cravan" es una película sobre la construcción de un mito. Imitando a su tío Oscar Wilde, Cravan creía que la vida debía parecerse al arte y no al revés, y logró que su estampa fuera tan múltiple que hoy resulta imposible saber donde acaba la realidad y donde empieza la leyenda. Por eso creí que el mejor enfoque posible pasaba por situar el film en esa frontera ambigua y degenerada, entre el documental y la ficción, que a mi entender es uno de los terrenos de exploración más interesantes del cine actual.
Una película que rescate la memoria de aquellos sucesos que ocurrieron y hoy ya nadie recuerda, pero también, esa otra memoria aún más olvidada: la de los hechos que, pudiendo haber ocurrido, tal vez no ocurrieron jamás. "Cravan vs Cravan" es un documental del mito y la leyenda.(…)"
"Ahora, cuando reviso por penúltima vez la película antes de su proyección, me gusta pensar que, al trasluz de Cravan, también hemos filmado otro mito: el del arte contemporáneo. Investigando tras los pasos de nuestro personaje, nos hemos ido encontrando con los testimonios de artistas, poetas, críticos, historiadores, galeristas, coleccionistas, aficionados… A las puertas de un nuevo siglo, todos ellos se enfrentan una vez más a su mito fundacional, el de las vanguardias. Y de alguna forma, en el tejido de sus voces también resuenan los ecos de aquellos otros que, hace cien años, ocuparon espacios semejantes durante el nacimiento y la eclosión de los "-ismos": aquellos movimientos que, como el mismo Cravan, vivían de devorarse a sí mismos. Pero por encima de todo, pienso que si esta película existe es porque la figura y la actitud de Cravan continúan siendo vigentes, hoy más que nunca. Porque lo que Cravan defendió con cada una de sus obras como puñetazos, y con cada uno de sus golpes como versos, fue un arte personal, apátrida y heterodoxo. Una reivindicaciónde la libertad contra los estereotipos y las convenciones, dispuesto a cuestionar mediante el humor la autoridad establecida. Porque en el fondo la historia de Cravan es una metáfora estupenda del siglo XX: la edad de las vanguardias artísticas y militares, l'age collage de un mundo internacional, a caballo entre el arte y la vida, del escándalo concebido como obra y la obra como mercado, de las desapariciones masivas, el siglo de las derrotas y del cine…
Un cine que nació casi a la vez que Cravan y con las mismas intenciones: ser viajero, moderno, aventurero, comprometido, inquieto y arriesgado. Quizás por eso Cravan escribió que aceptaría batirse en duelo con X siempre y cuando estuviera presente el cinematógrafo. Y aunque nuestra cámara haya llegado tarde para filmarle, al menos sí ha llegado a tiempo de captar los ecos y las rimas de sus golpes. Por eso he comenzado diciendo que ésta no es una película dadá, ni podría serlo: "Cravan vs Cravan" es una película sobre lo irrepetible.
Que empiece el combate."
Isaki Lacuesta en www.cravanvscravan.com
En 1918, le poète et pugiliste Arthur Cravan, neveu d'Oscar Wilde, disparaît dans le golfe du Mexique sans laisser de traces. Aujourd'hui, un autre boxeur et artiste, le réalisateur Frank Nicotra, mène une enquête qui le conduit sur les pas du mystérieux Arthur Cravan de la Suisse au Mexique, en passant par Paris, Londres et Barcelone, où Cravan disputa un combat légendaire contre le champion du monde des poids lourds Jack Johnson.
DVD rip by lunatik (KG)
Rapidshare:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Subtítulos en castellano srt
English subs srt
My blog at AvaxHome
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Subtítulos en castellano srt
English subs srt
My blog at AvaxHome