Tag Archives: Mika Kaurismäki

MIRIAM MAKEBA DOCUMENTARY

Miriam Makeba—the South African singer and anti-apartheid activist—was “the voice and the hope of Africa. Her music influenced artists across the globe, and remained anchored in her traditional South African roots, conveying strong messages against racism and poverty.

“Forced into exile in 1959… she performed with Harry Belafonte, Nina Simone, and Dizzy Gillespie, and was married to Hugh Masekela and Stokely Carmichael.”*

A public advocate and entertainer to the end, Makeba died at 76 immediately after leaving a concert stage in Castel Volturno, Italy, in 2008. The documentary MAMA AFRICA—MIRIAM MAKEBA, directed by Finnish filmmaker Mika Kaurismäki, is now playing at the Downtown Independent.

 

MAMA AFRICA—MIRIAM MAKEBA, through Wednesday, February 21.

DOWNTOWN INDEPENDENT, 251 South Main Street, Los Angeles.

mamaafrica.brownpapertickets.com

downtownindependent.com/events

Miriam Makeba with (top) Marlon Brando, and Nina Simone. Image credit: Miriam Makeba Foundation.

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SAMUEL FULLER

One didn’t talk to pulp filmmaker Samuel Fuller about “narrative” and “discourse.” Fuller spun yarns—gripping, overheated tales of warfare, psychosis, and boardroom-capitalism-as-gangsterism—as the country transitioned from depressed isolation prior to WW II to predatory empire in the ’50s, ’60s, and beyond.

A high-school dropout, Fuller was a teenage cub reporter for the New York Evening Graphic and an infantryman on the front lines in North Africa and Sicily. But Fuller’s America was no jingoist recruitment film. Pickup on South Street, House of Bamboo, Underworld U.S.A., The Crimson Kimono (the first film shot on location in Little Tokyo), Shock Corridor, and The Naked Kiss revelled in the rough practice of urban life as it was lived.

In the mid-sixties—his run of great films nearly complete—Fuller turned to acting, playing himself in Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot le fou, and gangsters in Wim WendersThe American Friend and Mika Kaurismäki’s Helsinki–Napoli All Night Long. (Fuller was beloved among the Cahiers group.)

Fuller spent most of his last decade with actress-writer Christa Lang Fuller, his wife, and Samantha, their daughter, in Paris apartments—first on the rue de la Baume, and then, happier, on the rue de Reuilly. He died in 1997 at home in the Hollywood Hills, at work on his autobiography, A Third Face (published in 2002).

DOGFACE—Fuller’s unaired CBS pilot from 1959—followed by A FULLER LIFE, Samantha Fuller’s documentary, will screen this weekend in Westwood.

DOGFACE and A FULLER LIFE

Saturday, February 18, at 7:30 pm.

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum

10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles.

Shock Corridor and The Naked Kiss are available in Blu-Ray from the Criterion Collection.

Top image credit: Columbia Pictures.

Above: Shock Corridor (1963).

Below image credit: 20th Century Fox.