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EDITOR'S PICK The world according to Paul SchraderWhat happens when you take a kid who, thanks to his strict Calvinist upbringing, never saw a movie until he was 18 and turn him into an author/director? Chances are you'd get something pretty wild. At least that's what happened in Paul Schrader's case: his films often celebrate the seamier side of the world. But they're more than mere walks on the wild side, as the Paul Schrader retrospective at International House Feb. 3-7 makes clear.
The retrospective also includes his most daring film, "Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters," an exploration of the conflicted life of the celebrated Japanese novelist; "Blue Collar," a gritty, cynical look at life on the assembly line; and "Light Sleeper," featuring Willem Dafoe as a mid-level drug dealer facing a mid-life crisis and a host of other problems. The Neighborhood Film/Video Project scheduled the festival to coincide with the local premiere of "Affliction," the 12th feature film directed by Schrader, who has also written 20 screenplays in his two decades in film. -S.S.
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