The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam

Long Tack Sam posterLong Tack Sam was an acrobat, magician, performer and vaudevillian who was one of the most amazing performers of all time. He’s also Ann Marie Fleming‘s great-grandfather and the star of The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam. Thanks to her search and travels around the world she pieces together the story of the man who performed around the world and influenced magicians and performers for decades, but he didn’t make the leap into film as he always believed that the portrayal of those of Asian heritage on the screen should be positive.
The film is a visual feast with a dizzying array of animation styles and approaches to tell the story. Presenting stills in an interesting way is a challenge, but Fleming rises to the occaision with subtle touches such as people in photographs blinking and animation of documents and comic books. It’s a wonderful journey that seems to combine just about every visual way of capturing an image from video to photography to drawing to painting to cinema.

The personal documentary is a tricky thing as what may be interesting to the filmmaker may not be interesting to the viewer. As it says in the end credits, “History is relatives.” Luckily in the skilled hands of Fleming the various stories of Long Tack Sam are revealed to us as she smoothly uses whichever technique works at any particular point in time. You can’t really categorize the film as it combines so many elements together in a skillful way that it’s just about everything you could hope for.

The film is distributed by the NFB and is screening at the Atlantic Film Festival on Sunday, September 14 at 7:05pm. There is also an NFB Master Class with Ann Marie Fleming on Monday that I’ll be enthusiastically attending.

September 13, 2003 , ,

Shuttle Reflections

It’s been a few days and the news cycle revolves around and around alternating between the Space Shuttle Columbia and the pending war in Iraq. I was absent-mindedly watching tv and noticed the “Breaking News” on CNN…it’s used so much now though that it took me a little while to figure out what was going on. Seeing Mission Control made me start to pay attention as I didn’t think that was a good sign. As what was happening slowly began to become clearer and clearer it was sad, but I can’t help but think about the horrific events of Sept. 11 and how the media coverage of that in some ways seems to have permanently numbed part of impact that “Breaking News” has.
But as the days went by I started thinking about the astronauts who were lost and then remembered the Challenger and how I’ve followed space flight pretty much my entire life.
My earliest memory is of the Apollo 11 moon landing (I wasn’t there…I just remember seeing it on tv). My Mom saved the local newspaper from that day and I still have it. The first novel that I read was a sf novel about the Moon race…it was fascinating as I read it years after the actual Moon landing which made it oddly anachronistic. The idea of space travel is amazing and inspiring. You can see the earth–the whole planet with every human being on it–from space…it’s amazing to think about that and the perspective it provides.
The connections that people feel with the space program are fascinating as well.
Many ‘bloggers are remembering their childhood and the various significant milestones and tragedies in the history of sending animals and then humans into space. The technology that I’m using now is connected to the development of technology for space so if it wasn’t for the space program, I wouldn’t be writing this and you wouldn’t be reading this. But the technological and scientific goals are often wrapped up with nationalistic goals as well. With the end of the Cold War much of the flag-waving motivation and attraction of the space program has faded and it has seemed to become less about patriotism and more about science…maybe that’s why the launches and landings didn’t get as much coverage and it seemed much more commonplace and less of a risk. But it was and remains risky and it sadly takes a terrible accident to bring the space program back into our thoughts again.

February 5, 2003 , , , , , , , , , ,