Friday, November 11, 2011

Finnish Film Night, Weds Nov 16th, 6 PM, Dwinelle B-4 at UC Berkeley

Finnish Film Night, Weds Nov 16th, 6 PM at UC Berkeley

A comedy about a place where the sun never shines.




Hello everyone!

There will be a Finnish film night next week on Wednesday Nov 16th, 6 PM. The location is Dwinelle B-4 (the doors to Dwinelle on the Campanile side, i.e. the east side will be unlocked). The movie is a road trip comedy called Napapiirin SankaritLapland Odyssey. The movie is shown in Finnish with English subtitles.


Everyone is welcome. Feel free to bring friends!

-Jenni T, Teaching Assistant in Finnish, UC Berkeley
Synopsis : Napapiirin Sankarit – Lapland Odyssey (2010)
The movie takes place in wintery Lapland where Janne has problems managing his life. When his wife Inari gives him money to buy a digital box for the TV, he ends up drinking with his two buddies Kapu and Räihänen. Inari has had enough and gives him an ultimatum: he needs to get the digital box by morning or else she will leave him. Janne and his two friends set out into the night trying to make their way to the nearest big city in hopes of making money on the way. Needless to say, it doesn’t turn out to be very simple and the trip becomes an adventure with many humorous turns.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Fri-Sun Nov. 11-13 ($10-$15) Raisa Punkki debuts her two-years in the making "Pick Cells" dance collaboration in the Mission

Pick Cells Dance Performance

Dance Mission Theater
3316 24th St; San Francisco

Tickets ($10-15) available in advance at http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event

Strong to the Finnish

PunkkiCo founder Raisa Punkki will debut her two-years in the making evening length dance collaboration Pick Cells in November; metaphor & minimalism, costumes that create chaos, movement that represents strength and resilience in the face of fate at its most callous plus a score that uses electronica along with the cello of Joan Jeanrenaud.

Native Finn and San Francisco resident since 2003 Raisa Punkki and her company punkkiCo present their two-year in the making evening length dance collaboration Pick Cells at Dance Mission, this November. Her conspirators/collaborators on the piece are set and costume designer Claire Pasquier, composer Albert Mathias and light designer Christian Mejia.
The title Pick Cells is both a play on pixels, where when you zoom in you see the perfection of a single dot, but when combined with others makes up a larger and much different image, along with the idea of picking up ideas as you move or create.
The narrative of the work is structured on two worlds: an ancient one awaiting an enigmatic birth event, and our modern world replete with its own challenges, dramas and superficiality.
An important thread in the piece is, strength. Specifically how that forms the backbone for the virtues of resilience and flexibility if one is going to enter into a standoff with nature when she acts in a seemingly capricious and cruel manner.
“I work using metaphor and minimalism,” says Punkki. “And I wanted to apply those in order to grapple with a world that can be wonderfully full of surprises one minute, and then diabolically full of threat the next.”
Inspiration for one of the solos in the piece, numbERs is partly rooted in Punkki’s observations of mothers who give birth to children who are in every way normal—rambunctious, curious and able-boded—except they suffer from the seemingly invisible, singular, and dangerous condition of Type 1 diabetes. “This condition cannot be cured, but it can be managed,” says Punkki. “But only through great discipline and establishing guidelines and patterns in order to monitor and care. In a way it’s like living with a simple math problem that can become a very dangerous equation if you don’t pay attention.”
The costumes were designed and created by Claire Pasquier to create both movement and chaos. At one point in the evening audiences will be asked to don 3-D glasses in order to deepen the impact of the costumes, as if experiencing 3-D to the second power.
The score by Albert Mathias ranges from suspenseful and propulsive to dreamy and sensual. Pick Cells will be performed along with Waiting, part of punkkiCo’s current repertory. The score for Waiting features solo cello composition by Joan Jeanrenaud.
Dancers include:
Jennifer Meek, Sarah Keeney and Raisa Punkki with ten chaos creating creatures.
About Raisa Punkki
Raisa Punkki is a dancer, choreographer, teacher and the founder of punkkiCo. When it comes to her work, she leans toward an aesthetic that welcomes the energetic, sensual and strange. Raised in Finland, she counts her years working in theater doing plays, musicals and dance as a chief influence. As well as an abiding interest in photography and the natural world. “I have filmed many sunrises in San Francisco.”
When it comes to inspiration, Punkki primarily looks to situations in everyday life between people, but like many artists other artists also inspire her. A short list of these would include Georgia O’Keefe, Dan Perjovchi and Abisag Tullman plus choreographers Kenneth Kvarnström and Wayne McGregor along with actors Elizabeth Taylor, Shirley McClaine and vintage Michael Gambon. “At one point I read everything published by Salman Rushdie, Paul Auster, Oliver Sacks, David Mamet and Peter Hoeg.”
Punkki’s work is known for its combination of abstraction, theatrical costuming and lighting along with a penchant for brooding and haunting electronica as a soundscape.
Grants and nominations include two Finnish State Grants, Zellerbach Family and Finlandia Foundation grants, along with a nomination as Finland’s Best Dancer of the Year. Since founding PunkkiCo in 2005, her choreography and dances have appeared at the Women On the Way Festival, Collaboration Music and Dance, ODC’s Pilot and House Special and CounterPulse.
PunkkiCo’s work includes Polar Night, end trance, nunataks and all blue among other titles. In 2011 she will debut an evening length piece entitled Pick Cells with artist Claire Pasquier, composer Albert Mathias and lighting designer Christian Mejia. Pick Cells premieres the weekend of November 11-13 at Dance Mission Theater. More information punkkico.com
About PunkkiCo
PunkkiCo seeks to create artistically satisfying high quality performance through collaboration with artists from different disciplines in order to transform emotion into motion. Music composition, sound and costume design are all pivotal in the development of the “movement material,” which is based on Finnish and European contemporary dance. Founded in 2005 by Raisa Punkki—who says about her work, “It all comes from life”—collaborators have included composer Albert Mathias, artist Nicole Bauguss, set and costume designer Claire Pasquier, and lighting designer Christian Mejia. Over the years punkkiCo has moved from a reliance on clean, pure lines and speed of movement into looking for and incorporating those little moments that can be held together by gestures, breathing or stillness.


For more information, visit Raisa's website: http://punkkico.com/default.aspx

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Harry Siitonen's "Sports So Far" [November]

Sports for Nov. SO FAR...

Finland defeated Poland in exciting Davis Cup tennis play to advance to a higher
rung in the Euro-African Circuit on Sept 16-17 at the Espoo Arena. Henri Kontinen,
21, with an ATP ranking of 281, upset Poland’s Jerzy Janowicz, (ATP 171) to open the
tourney, 6-4, 6-3, 6-7 (10-12), 6-3 in a 3-hour match, blistering 21 aces along the way.

Finland’s top player Jarkko Nieminen, 31, (ATP 50) then trimmed the sails of Grzegorz
Panfil, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Finland cinched the deal the next day when a doubles team of
Nieminen and Kontinen edged Poland’s Mariusz Fyrstenburg and Marcin Matkowski, 7-
6(10, 7-6(5) and 6-4. This Polish douibles team, ranked 11th in the world, had made the
finals of the recent US Open, hence another upset by the Finns. So the reverse singles
were just a formality. Finland sent a couple of young players Harri Heliovaara, 21, and
Micke Kontinen, 18, (Henri’s younger brother) against Janowicz and Panfil.to get top
tournament experience. Janowicz took Heliovaara, 6-3, 6-4, and Panfil had a tougher time
with young Micke, prevailing by 7-6 (6-1), 6-4. So Finland stays in the Euro-African
Division first division.

Led by Heikki Kukkonen’s excellent personal best of 1:24:07.52 in the 20,000-meter
racewalk, Finland defeated teams from Sweden, Norway and Denmark in the annual
Nordic Racewalk Track Championships at Halden, Norway on Sept. 17.

The World Boxing Organization has ranked Finnish heavyweight Robert Helenius
as Number One challenger to Ukrainian Vladimir Klitshcko’s WBO crown. However,
pro boxing’s bible, Ring Magazine, lists Helenius, who has been undefeated in 16
professional bouts, as only 6th. In 1938, Ring ranked Finland’s Gunnar Bärlund as No. 3
contender to Joe Louis’s then undisputed heavyweight title. In today’s tangled pugilistic
mess there are five different heavyweight world titles! Vladimir holds the championship
belt in four of them. In addition to the WBO crown, he’s also world champ of the
World Boxing Association, International Boxing Federation, and International Boxing
Organization. His brother Vitali is the world heavyweight champ of the World Boxing
Council. The gargantuan Ukrainian brothers have sworn to their mother that they will
never fight one another in the ring. So Helenius has a big chore ahead of him if he’s
going to try to pick off one or more of these titles. Meantime, he’s being groomed to take
on the overall European champ German-Ukrainian Alexander Dimitrenko, instead.

Sini (Pöyry) Latvala, 7-time Finnish women’s national hammer-throwing champ, has
scored a world best distance in the Olympic weight throw of 12.30 meters at Kauhajoki
on Sept. 19. It’s not considered a world record event because it’s not a worldwide sport.
It is practiced in the United States, however, especially among masters’ age groups. The
senior men’s Olympic weight is 56 pounds or 25.4 kilos, and the women’s is 35 pounds
or 15.88 kilos. Sini is one powerful woman of Amazonian scale.

Back to boxing, Juho Haapaoja decisioned France’s Faisal Ibnel Arrami to take
the European Union light-heavyweight crown on a card in Helsinki on Sept. 23. In a
women’s feature bout, Finland’s Eva Wahlström TKOed Marisel Reyes of the Dominican
Republic in the 7th round when the referee stopped the fight. Wahlström fights in the
upper featherweight division.

Finnish national champ Leena Puotiniemi, 35, was 15th woman in the Berlin Marathon
on Sept, 25, but her personal best time of 2:35:54 met the A standard, qualifying her for
the 2012 London Olympics. Puotiniemi only began running at age 27 and competed in

the Kaleva Games Finnish National Championships for the first time at 32, But the big
news at Berlin was the new world record time run in a marathon by Patrick Makau, 26,
of Kenya in 2:03:38. It wasn’t the fastest time ever run as Geoffrey Mutai of Kenya won
the Boston Marathon last April in 2:03:02, and right behind him at 2:03:06 was fellow
Kenyan Moses Musop. But since the Boston Marathon is a point to point instead of a
loop course and has a long downhill tendency it does not calculate in world record times.
Florence Kiplagat of Kenya won the women’s division at Berlin in 2:19:43.

Finland’s Kenyan-born Lewis Korir, 25, won the famous Liddingoloppet 30Km cross-
county run at Lidingo,. Sweden on Sept. 24. This is considered about the largest run
in the world with 40,000 participants. Two years ago Korir was the Finnish national
champion in the 5000 and 10,000-meter runs as well as the marathon. But since he wasn’t
a Finnish citizen he was disallowed being crowned a national champion last year. He
intends to apply for Finnish citizenship to correct that situation, He runs for the TUUL
running club of Turku.

After a mediocre season on the US women’s golf tour, Finland’s Minea Blomqvist
popped into form by finishing third in the European Tour’s French Open recently. In
fact, she was only one point behind the top two women with an excellent score of 275
(68+67+71+67), 13 under par. England’s Felicity Johnson and Italy’s Diana Luna tied
for top spot with 274 (14 under par). Johnson won the shootout. Finland’s Kaisa Ruuttila
tied for 4th place one point behind Blomqvist. Minea won 17,500 euros for her great
showing to bring her brief European tour total this year to 65,000E so far.

(This is it, but Anaheim Ducks are playing a top Finnish team in hockey at Helsinki this
week and will open its NHL season in Helsinki against the Buffalo Sabres.. If you have
room I’ll send results before deadline. Teemu Selänne and Saku Koivu are teaming up
again for the Ducks.)

All-time great hockey player Teemu Selänne was treated like a rock star by Finnish fans when his Anaheim Ducks NHL Club showed up in Helsinki to open their season against the Buffalo Sabres. Saku Pinta and Toni Lydman of the Ducks also were appreciated but with Selänne it was "over the top.", In an exhibition game with Finland's Jokerit (Jokers) hockey club, Anaheim puilled out a 4-3 OT win on Oct. 5, with Selänne accredited with an assist in defeating his old Finnish alma mater which he left in 1992 for the NHL. But then came the season's opener with the Sabres on Oct. 7. :Not so hot for the Ducks, as Buffalo stampeded over them 4-1. No points for Selänne or Koivu, but both had a chance to cool off in the penalty box, Teemu once and Saku twice. But then again Finlander Ville Leino did bang out a goal for the razor-sharp Sabres. (FOOTNOTE: The National Hockey League has a number of excellent Finnish players but we won't be reporting much on the subject during the season because it would be too much of an overload for a monthly column. Follow the events in your daily media, and if you live conveniently, go see your NHL favorites play. --HS)