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Village Voice
Looking back on his first term.
By Roy Edroso
SF Weekly
A studio apartment in San Francisco now costs $1,700 per month. Hence the madness.
By Ashley Harrell
Westword
What to do when your friends become rock 'n' roll stars? Go along for the ride.
By Adam Cayton-Holland
Flight of the Red Balloon
Published on July 03, 2008
The Red Balloon was the art-house E.T. of 1956. Flight of the Red Balloon is something far more baffling — a literal-minded movie with an amiably free-floating metaphor. Chinese grandmaster Hou Hsiao-hsien, who screened The Red Balloon only after he was commissioned to remake it by the Musée d'Orsay, has said the film shows the "cruel realities" of childhood. His own version begins as fantasy, with 7-year-old Simon (Simon Iteanu) addressing the otherwise unnoticed scarlet sphere drifting overhead, and then casually naturalizes, tracking the boy over the roofs of Paris to contemplate the untidy existence he shares with his mother, Suzanne (Juliette Binoche). The movie is animated not only by the hide-and-seek antics of the red balloon but also by Binoche's extravagant turn as a frazzled performance artist. Played with total self-absorption and a corresponding absence of vanity, Suzanne is a harried composition in frowsy blonditude, filmy scarves and mad décolletage — the most dynamic female protagonist in the Hou oeuvre. Suzanne's situation may be an emotional jumble but, untethered by mundane reality, the balloon is free to roam. In its unexpected rhythms and visual surprises, its creative misunderstandings and its outré syntheses, Flight of the Red Balloon is a movie of genius. It is in a class by itself.