Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 37: Fri Feb 7

Duel at Diablo (Nelson, 1966): BFI Southbank, NFT3, 8.40pm

This 35mm presentation is part of the African American Western season and also screens on February 1st. You can find the full details here.

BFI introduction:
Set in 1880, this adaptation of Marvin Albert’s best-selling 1957 novel Apache Rising arrived at a moment when the Western genre was undergoing significant revision. The film employs the Anglo-Native American conflict as a metaphor for Black-white relations in contemporary US society. In his first Western, Sidney Poitier delivers a commanding performance alongside James Garner, fresh from the hit TV series Maverick. Together, they confront prejudice on the frontier, in a groundbreaking precursor to the interracial buddy films that became a hallmark of US cinema.

Here (and above) is the trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 36: Thu Feb 6

Skin Game (Bogart, 1971): BFI Southbank, NFT3, 8.40pm

This 35mm presentation is part of the African American Western season and also screens on March 2nd. You can find the full details here.

BFI introduction:
In the pre-Civil War West, Gossett and Garner’s buddies and professional conmen Jason O’Rourke and Quincy Drew beat racist slave owners at their own game. Traveling through small towns, they swindle auction buyers out of their ill-gotten gains and abscond with their money. But what will these gamblers do when their luck runs out? Paul Bogart and Gordon Douglas’ comedy balances action and quick-fire dialogue, and features its two stars at their very best.

Here (and above) is thew trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 36: Wed Feb 5

The Learning Tree (Parks, 1969): BFI Southbank, NFT3, 8.40pm

This groundbreaking film is part of the African American Western season and also screens on February 21st. Details here.

BFI introduction:

Renowned photographer Gordon Parks wrote, directed, produced and scored this adaptation of his 1963 novel. A deeply personal and semi-autobiographical drama, it follows Newt Winger, a Black teenager navigating adolescence and manhood in 1920s Cherokee Flats, Kansas. This poignant coming-of-age story vividly captures the challenges of racial injustice, community and self-discovery during a turbulent era. Among the first films to be inducted into the American National Film Registry in 1989, it remains a touchstone of American cinema.

Here (and above) is the trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 35: Tue Feb 4

The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (Fassbinder, 1972): Prince Charles Cinema, 8.15pm

This is a Funeral Parade Queer Film Society screening. There are others here.

Chicago Reader review:
A lesbian love triangle becomes a schema of sexual power plays in Rainer Werner Fassbinder's most harshly stylized and perhaps most significant film (1972). The action is confined to a single set—the apartment of fashion designer Margit Carstensen, decorated with desiccated mannequins and a mammoth painting of fleshy, galloping nudes—where the three characters (one is a mute) scheme, complain, and attempt to seduce. With Irm Hermann and Hanna Schygulla.
Dave Kehr

Here (and above) is the trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 34: Mon Feb 3

Golden Eighties (Akerman, 1986): BFI Southbank, NFT1, 8.35pm

This screening, part of the Chantal Akerman season at BFI, will feature an introduction by cellist and composer Sonia Wieder-Atherton. The film is also being shown on February 13th and 28th.

Chicago Reader review:
Belgian filmmaker Chantal Akerman (Jeanne Dielman) made this independent work from a work-in-progress known as The Eighties (the English title of the finished film is Window Shopping). Forty minutes of videotaped auditions and rehearsals for Akerman's shopping center musical are followed by three production numbers—in radiant 35-millimeter—from the film. The subject is first and foremost Akerman's love of actors and the filmmaking process, and second the process itself—the intermediary steps between conception and perfection, from physical materials to cinematic illusions. If you don't know Akerman's work, this is an excellent place to start: it's a very funny, very idiosyncratic piece from one of the most sympathetic of modernist filmmakers.

Dave Kehr

Here (and above) is the opening to the film.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 33: Sun Feb 2

La Region Centrale (Snow, 1971): ICA Cinema, 12.15pm

This 16mm presentation is part of a two days of screenings at ICA Cinema devoted to a titan of experimental cinema, Michael Snow (1929-2023), who produced a body of work that established entirely new ways of seeing.

Chicago Reader review:
Michael Snow’s 1971 film La region centrale is surely one of the most unusual in the history of the medium. For three hours we see a single northern Quebec landscape from a single position, with no signs of human presence save a rare glimpse of the camera shadow. The camera is mounted on a complex custom-designed machine that takes it through a series of increasingly elaborate, carefully choreographed movements, many of which combine several different kinds of rotation. The sound track consists entirely of a series of beeps that come from the tape used to control the machine. Clearly, this is not a film for everyone, but what emerges for the patient viewer is a sense that this rocky, mostly treeless landscape possesses a vast, timeless, almost visionary continuity that ultimately transcends the human-designed camera movements. I have hiked similar Canadian terrain and can testify that this land has a feeling of being very old, as if barely evolved through the aeons, a sense well captured by Snow’s film. Few works of art have so eloquently articulated the difference between the world we were given and the consciousness we have evolved.
Fred Camper

Here
(and above) is an extract.

Capital Celluloid 2025 — Day 32: Sat Feb 1

Wavelength (Snow, 1967): ICA Cinema, 4pm

This film (showing along with 'So This Is' (1982), is part of a two days of screenings at ICA Cinema devoted to a titan of experimental cinema, Michael Snow (1929-2023), who produced a body of work that established entirely new ways of seeing.


ICA introduction:
A painter, sculptor, photographer and musician as well as a filmmaker, Snow used techniques from across the disciplines to challenge conventional cinematic notions of perception and representation. As part of the structural film movement in which form was prioritised over content, he saw framing, sound and duration as tools for reinventing the language of the medium, saying that “to shape time seems to me to be the quintessence of cinema”.

 Objecting to commercial cinema’s explicit attempts to prompt emotional responses, Snow didn’t try to predict the effect his work would have on audiences. Instead he stressed the bodily effect of viewership, emphasising that his films, while carefully structured, were “real experiences”. Noting that his 1971 work La RĂ©gion Centrale had caused some viewers to faint, he said “I must be doing something right”. His work's ability to prompt both instinctive and analytical reactions has helped it endure across the decades. With thanks to Dream of Light, a London-based film project that champions experimental and underseen cinema.

Chicago Reader review:
Michael Snow’s notorious experimental classic (1967), consisting of a single, extended zoom (if anything moving at such a snaillike pace can properly be called a zoom) from one side of a loft space to the other. The aesthetic unfolding is engaging, also quite demanding, though I’m not convinced that letting your technical apparatus make the major decisions of your art is such a good formal idea. If nothing else, the film provides an inadvertent comment on the old classroom riddle of whether it’s possible to have a one-word poem; no, the classical answer goes, because it wouldn’t rhyme . . . and I’m not so sure that’s as stupid as it sounds.
Pat Graham

Here (and above) is the trailer.