Tarnation (2003 film)

Last updated
Tarnation
TarnationPOSTER11.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jonathan Caouette
Written byJonathan Caouette
Produced by
  • Jonathan Caouette
  • Stephen Winter
StarringJonathan Caouette
CinematographyJonathan Caouette
Edited by
  • Jonathan Caouette
  • Brian A. Kates
Music by
Distributed by Wellspring
Release date
  • October 8, 2004 (2004-10-08)
Running time
91 minutes [1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$218.32
Box office$1.2 million [2]

Tarnation is a 2003 American documentary film essay by Jonathan Caouette. [3] [4]

Contents

Summary

The film was created by Caouette from over 20 years of hundreds of hours of old Super 8 footage, VHS videotape, photographs, and answering machine messages to tell the story of his life and his relationship with his mentally ill mother Renee. [5]

Synopsis

Tarnation is an autobiographical documentary focusing on Caouette's early life and adulthood, as well as his mother, Renee LeBlanc, who was treated with electroshock in her youth.

With an absent father and a mother who struggled with mental illness, Caouette eventually settled in the Houston area with his grandparents, Adolph and Rosemary Davis, who despite personality quirks, provided a supportive family for him. The film explores Caouette's life as he negotiates his complicated relationship with his mother as her child, friend, and ultimately, parental figure while developing his creativity as an actor, writer and director. His empathy for his mother, and for the abuses women endure, is demonstrated in a scene early in the movie in which an approximately 11-year-old Caouette improvises a monologue as a woman in an abusive relationship.

Caouette came out as gay at a young age and moved to New York City at age 25, eventually finding a boyfriend named David Sanin Paz. They lived together in New York City for many years. As documented in the film, his mother has lived with them at times and they've formed an unusual family. [6]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack uses songs by Hex (Donnette Thayer and Steve Kilbey), Lisa Germano, The Cocteau Twins, Dolly Parton, Low, Mark Kozelek, Glen Campbell, The Magnetic Fields, Iron and Wine, The Chocolate Watchband, Mavis Staples, Red House Painters, Marianne Faithfull and many more. Orchestral cues for the film were composed by John Califra. Max Avery Lichtenstein wrote several original instrumental songs for the film, including the film's recurring theme "Tarnation".

The film's trailer features orchestral music by John Califra, "Tarnation" by Max Avery Lichtenstein, and the song "Safe As Milk" by the band Hopewell.

No soundtrack compilation album has been released, but a digital E.P. featuring selections of Max Avery Lichtenstein's original music for the film was released in 2005 by Tin Drum Recordings.

Production

Caouette was shaping his material when he sent in an audition tape for John Cameron Mitchell's Shortbus . The tape contained the footage of an 11-year-old Jonathan imitating a battered wife. Mitchell was impressed and encouraged him to continue working on the film. He alerted Stephen Winter, then the artistic director of MIX NYC, the New York Lesbian & Gay Experimental Film Festival. Stephen became the producer of Tarnation. A tape found its way to Mitchell's friend, Gus Van Sant, who was also deeply moved by the film. Both he and Mitchell signed on as executive producers. [7]

Film critic Roger Ebert, an early supporter, said $400,000 more was eventually spent by the distributor on sound, print, score and music/clip clearances to bring the film to theaters. [8] The film went on to win the Best Documentary Award from the National Society of Film Critics, [9] also was nominated for the Independent Spirits, the Gotham Awards, as well as the L.A. and London International Film Festivals. [10]

The film was initially made for a total budget of $218.32, using free iMovie software on a Mac. [11] [12]

Reception and legacy

The November 2003 world premiere of the movie at MIX was much more abstract in nature, running about two hours. With input from Mitchell, Winter, and co-editor Brian A. Kates, Caouette shot new footage and edited the film down to about 90 minutes for its screening at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival in the Frontier Section. There it was invited to appear in the 2004 Cannes Film Festival Directors' Fortnight. The filmmakers did not have the $30,000 to make a film print for the festival but at the last minute respected art house distributor Wellspring picked it up and brought it to Cannes where it garnered great critical acclaim and worldwide distribution. [7]

Walk Away Renee, Jonathan's companion film to Tarnation, examines a certain later period involving the filmmaker and his mother. It premiered at Cannes in 2011 and was released internationally in May 2012. [13]

In June 2020, it was announced that indie distributor Hope Runs High had picked up Tarnation and was giving the film its streaming premiere on the Criterion Collection's Criterion Channel. [14] [15]

Related Research Articles

Cinéma vérité is a style of documentary filmmaking developed by Edgar Morin and Jean Rouch, inspired by Dziga Vertov's theory about Kino-Pravda. It combines improvisation with use of the camera to unveil truth or highlight subjects hidden behind reality. It is sometimes called observational cinema, if understood as pure direct cinema: mainly without a narrator's voice-over. There are subtle, yet important, differences between terms expressing similar concepts. Direct cinema is largely concerned with the recording of events in which the subject and audience become unaware of the camera's presence: operating within what Bill Nichols, an American historian and theoretician of documentary film, calls the "observational mode", a fly on the wall. Many therefore see a paradox in drawing attention away from the presence of the camera and simultaneously interfering in the reality it registers when attempting to discover a cinematic truth.

<i>Sex, Lies, and Videotape</i> 1989 film by Steven Soderbergh

Sex, Lies, and Videotape is a 1989 American independent drama film written and directed by Steven Soderbergh. The plot tells the story of a troubled man who videotapes women discussing their sexuality and fantasies, and its impact on the relationships of a troubled married couple and the wife's younger sister.

September Tapes is a faux-documentary feature film co-written and directed by Christian Johnston in his feature debut. An early review of the film's promotional trailer noted that the footage looked "more real than network news footage".

<i>Mondovino</i> 2004 American film

Mondovino is a 2004 documentary film on the impact of globalization on the world's different wine regions written and directed by American film maker Jonathan Nossiter. It was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival and a César Award.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jonathan Caouette</span> American film director

Jonathan Caouette is an American film director, writer, editor and actor.

Max Avery Lichtenstein is an American record producer, composer and songwriter based in North Salem, New York. He's produced records with such artists as Mercury Rev, Hopewell and The Silent League. He composed the soundtrack for Jonathan Caouette's movie Tarnation and for the 2005 James Bai film Puzzlehead.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Low-budget film</span> Motion picture shot with little to no funding from a major film studio or private investor

A low-budget film or low-budget movie is a motion picture shot with little to no funding from a major film studio or private investor.

<i>Shortbus</i> 2006 film by John Cameron Mitchell

Shortbus is a 2006 American erotic comedy-drama film written and directed by John Cameron Mitchell. The plot revolves around a sexually diverse ensemble of colorful characters trying desperately to connect in an early 2000s New York City. The characters converge in a weekly Brooklyn artistic/sexual salon loosely inspired by various underground NYC gatherings that took place in the early 2000s. According to Mitchell, the film attempts to "employ sex in new cinematic ways because it's too interesting to leave to porn." Shortbus includes a variety of explicit scenes containing non-simulated sexual intercourse with visible penetration and male ejaculation.

Indiewood films are made outside of the Hollywood studio system or traditional arthouse/independent filmmaking system yet managed to be produced, financed and distributed by the two with varying degrees of success and/or failure.

Nanette Burstein is an American film and television director. Burstein has produced, directed, and co-directed several documentaries including the Academy Award nominated and Sundance Special Jury Prize winning film On the Ropes.

Mubi is a global over-the-top service streaming platform, production company and film distributor. MUBI produces and theatrically distributes films by emerging and established filmmakers, which are exclusively available on its platform. The catalog consists of world cinema films, such as arthouse films, documentary films, independent films. Additionally, it publishes Notebook, a film criticism and news publication, and provides weekly cinema tickets to selected new-release films through MUBI GO.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Cameron Mitchell</span> American film director (born 1963)

John Cameron Mitchell is an American actor, playwright, screenwriter, singer, songwriter, producer and director. He is known as the writer, director and star of the 2001 film Hedwig and the Angry Inch, which is based on the stage musical of the same name. He also portrayed the role of Joe Exotic in the Peacock limited series Joe vs. Carole in 2022.

Walk Away Renee is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Jonathan Caouette. It is the third full-length feature in Caouette's filmography.

Collage film is a style of film created by juxtaposing found footage from disparate sources. The term has also been applied to the physical collaging of materials onto film stock.

<i>Fruitvale Station</i> (film) 2013 film by Ryan Coogler

Fruitvale Station is a 2013 American biographical drama film written and directed by Ryan Coogler. It is Coogler's feature directorial debut, and is based on the events leading to the death of Oscar Grant, a young man killed in 2009 by Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) police officer Johannes Mehserle at the Fruitvale district BART station in Oakland, California. The film stars Michael B. Jordan as Grant, with Kevin Durand and Chad Michael Murray playing the two BART police officers involved in Grant's death, although their names were changed for the film. Melonie Diaz, Ahna O'Reilly, and Octavia Spencer also star.

Hope Runs High is an American film distribution company. They began preserving digitally and distributing out-of-print documentary films before expanding to narrative and first-run theatrical films. A unique element of their library is that much of it focuses on films by women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ filmmakers and subjects. The company also houses a small record label that releases movie soundtracks and film scores.

<i>Time</i> (2020 film) 2020 American film

Time is a 2020 American documentary film produced and directed by Garrett Bradley. It follows Sibil Fox Richardson and her fight for the release of her husband, Rob, who was serving a 60-year prison sentence for engaging in an armed bank robbery.

<i>Flee</i> (film) 2021 animated documentary film

Flee is a 2021 independent adult animated documentary film directed by Jonas Poher Rasmussen. An international co-production with Denmark, France, Norway, and Sweden, it follows the story of a man under the alias Amin Nawabi, who shares his hidden past of fleeing his home country of Afghanistan to Denmark for the first time. Riz Ahmed and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau serve as executive producers and narrators for the English-language dub version.

Sandhya Suri is a British-Indian film director and documentarian.

References

  1. "Tarnation (15)". British Board of Film Classification . November 23, 2004. Retrieved September 30, 2016.
  2. "Tarnation". The Numbers . Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  3. Kohn, Eric (June 23, 2020). "Stream of the Day: Made for $200, 'Tarnation' Is Still Ahead of Its Time 18 Years Later". IndieWire via Yahoo! Entertainment.
  4. Is the Video Essay a New Avant-Garde? - The EDGE
  5. "Tarnation /Goodbye South, Goodbye". UCLA Film & Television Archive .
  6. "Tarnation Reviews & Links". Jonathancaouette.blogspot.com. 2004-10-21. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  7. 1 2 Foundas, Scott (2004-10-14). "What in Tarnation". LA Weekly . Archived from the original on 2013-01-28. Retrieved 2013-07-26.
  8. "Documentary makers rally for fair use", Tiscali. "Citing dozens of examples, they contend, for instance, that the budget of Jonathan Caouette's homemade 2004 documentary 'Tarnation' ballooned from $218 to $400,000, 'using most of the eventual budget to clear rights.'"
  9. Sean McConville and Anna Bryson The Routledge Guide to Interviewing: Oral History, Social Enquiry and Investigation , p. 97, at Google Books
  10. Jane L. Chapman Issues in Contemporary Documentary , p. 60, at Google Books
  11. Youngs, Ian (May 18, 2004). "Micro-budget film wows Cannes". BBC News . Retrieved November 24, 2012.
  12. "New and Noteworthy: iPod industry standard?: Wired's Vaporware 2003; iMovie movie at Sundance". CNET . January 21, 2004. Retrieved November 24, 2012.
  13. Knegt, Peter (19 July 2011). "Sundance Selects Walks Away With Jonathan Caouette's "Renee"". IndieWire. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
  14. "The Criterion Channel's June 2020 Lineup". The Criterion Collection . May 28, 2020.
  15. "Tarnation trailer". YouTube . May 28, 2020.