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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
1999 Sydney Film Festival
Works of genuine artistry, worthy efforts and some others
By Richard Phillips
15 July 1999
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Every film festival presents its patrons with a dilemma. What
to choose from the large and varied array of work screened? What
"cinematic windows" to look through? The general principle
that I follow is to first see the movies recommended by WSWS
reviewers from other film festivals. This is imperative given
that the majority of these films will never be shown on commercial
release in any Australian cinemas.
Next, I try to watch a broad cross-section of work from new
and leading international filmmakers, as well as the latest work
of veteran directors. And finally, if the opportunity arises,
view any classic films on show. Fulfillment of all these priorities
is rarely possible, but a cut in the Sydney Film Festival's duration
this year, from 15 to 12 days, made the selection process even
more difficult.
This year's festival, which screened more than 150 films from
43 countries, included several inspiring and artistically convincing
works by directors deeply concerned with the human condition.
The most outstanding included Bertrand Tavernier's It All Starts
Today; The Hole by Tsia Ming-liang, The Power of
Kangwon Province by Hong Sang-Soo; The Adopted Son
by Aktan Abdykalykov; Ken Loach's My Name is Joe and Deepa
Mehta's Earth (see links to WSWS reviews of these
films below). Many of the images, characters and events depicted
in these films will resonate with me for years.
The festival also featured some thoughtful and challenging
works from Italy, Brazil, China, Iran, Indonesia and Senegal.
Although not on the same artistic level as those previously mentioned,
these films reveal that many filmmakers are thoroughly dissatisfied
with tired cinematic platitudes and are attempting to explore
some of the complex issues confronting humanity at the end of
the 20th century.
Innocence of childhood
Children of Heaven, written and directed by Iranian
director Majid Majidi, was one of the better films. A sensitive
warm-hearted story set in a Tehran working class district, it
deals with the problems that arise after a young boy (Ali) loses
his sister Zohre's only pair of shoes. The family is poor and
so Ali, with the reluctant support of his sister, decides to keep
the loss a secret from their parents. Ali persuades Zohre that
they must share his worn-out sandshoes until the family's finances
improve. Zohre will wear the shoes in the morning, Ali in the
afternoon.
Life, once so simple, has now become extremely complicated
and full of stress. Ali's father is unemployed and there seems
little hope that the family's economic fortunes will change. Ali,
who must wait until midday each day for the sandshoes, is always
late for school and constantly in trouble with his teachers. He
lives in fear of his parents discovering that he lost his sister's
shoes.
A ray of hope appears in the form of an inter-school running
competition and the chance to win a new set of running shoes.
This challenge, however, is complicated by the fact that the new
shoes are for third place in the competition. Ali, who has the
ability to win, must pace himself, dampen the enthusiasm of his
teachers and come in third.
This meticulously crafted film has many similarities to The
White Balloon by Jafar Panahi, and is produced with the same
confidence that simple stories involving ordinary children will
reach audiences of all backgrounds. Like that movie, Children
of Heaven mainly uses non-professional actors.
Majidi, who was born in Tehran in 1959 and began his film career
as an actor, has been able to extract extraordinary performances
from the young actors. An interesting feature of the film is its
subtle but insistent exposure of the class divide in Iranian society.
Given the strict censorship and prevailing political conditions
in Iran, this aspect of the film is quite unique.
Impact of the Bosnian conflict
Rehearsals for War, directed and written by Mario Martone,
is a thoughtful and multi-layered work about a poor Neapolitan
theatre company preparing to stage a solidarity performance of
Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes in Sarajevo, during the
Bosnian war. (Aeschylus' ancient classic, set during a civil war
and city seige, is a terrifyingly vivid portrayal of the psychological
terror, delirium and breakdown in social relations produced by
war.) Leo, a young actor and the film's main character, conceived
of the project in response to a friendship with a Bosnian director
he had met before the war.
The rehearsals take place in a run-down theatre in Naples'
Spanish Quarter where the everyday life of the locals and the
rehearsals constantly intersect. Poverty, unemployment, neighbourhood
disputes, police harassment and the activities of small-time gangsters
intertwine with the work of the actors. The passion of the dedicated
young actors, willing to risk their lives or careers in the dangerous
plan to perform in the midst of the war, is contrasted with the
complacency of the Civic Theatre, an established and well-funded
theatre company in the city.
Short of funds, Leo is forced to turn to the Civic Theatre
and its cynical director in order to keep his production alive.
The Civic's director agrees to help Leo if he allows Sara Cataldi,
a well-known star, to perform in the play and thus release her
from an expensive contractual arrangement with the Civic Theatre.
As the date approaches for the Bosnian performance, the district
where rehearsals have been taking place becomes embroiled in its
own conflict, with a murder and the eruption of a bloody struggle
between local gangs over who will control the area. Leo also learns
that a grenade has killed his friend in Sarajevo and that Seven
Against Thebes cannot go ahead in Bosnia. The film ends with
the Civic Theatre company celebrating its latest performance and
wondering whatever happened to Leo's company.
Mario Martone, who has 20-year career in Italian theatre, is
the founder of Falso Movimento, Italy's best-known avant-garde
performing group. He assembled the film from footage shot during
rehearsals of his 1995 stage production of the Aeschylus classic,
together with scripted scenes filmed two years later in Naple's
Spanish Quarter. Martone has explained that he made the film out
of concern that his generation had no understanding of the tragic
events in Yugoslavia.
"Are there any words that can be said about what has happened?
All words seems to fall on deaf ears, crushed as they are by the
images of horror that poured into our homes through the live war
broadcasts on TV. The ideological confusion clouds our ideas and
makes it difficult to distinguish between right and wrong and
victims and aggressors ... I decided to make this film to penetrate
the void," he said.
Unfortunately, in spite of capable performances from a strong
cast and the almost seamless merging of the rehearsals, actors'
lives and the local Neapolitan population, Rehearsals for War
falls short of his aim. And while Martone is certainly not obliged
to produce an historical thesis, little is explained about what
produced the Yugoslav tragedy, either directly or symbolically.
Nor is this weakness overcome by simply making comparisons between
Sarajevo and Aeschylus' ancient Thebes.
Despite these problems, Martone's third feature undermines
any conception that civil war, of the type seen in Yugoslavia
over the last decade, could not erupt in another European country.
In fact, the constant references to the social conditions in Naples
blur the line between that city and wartime Sarajevo, underlining
the universal character of the problems facing ordinary people
everywhere.
Legacy of military repression in Brazil
Friendly Fire, from Brazil, is the second feature by
Beto Brant. This short dramatic film tells the story of four friends
previously involved in the armed underground resistance to the
Brazilian military dictatorship in the late 1960s and earlier
70s. All were jailed, tortured or lost close friends and loved
ones.
The film begins with the now-middle-aged men reuniting, apparently
for a fishing trip. But Miguel, one of the four who has remained
politically active, has brought his three friends together in
order to hunt down and exact revenge on one of the police officers
responsible for horrendous torture of the men 25 years earlier.
According to official government records the police officer
died. In fact he was moved to another part of the country and
provided with a new identity. Miguel, who has discovered the torturer's
location, eventually persuades his three companions that they
must execute the former policeman. Miguel's plan turns into a
bloody tragedy after the dying ex-police officer declares that
one of the four is an informer and responsible for the previous
capture and the death of their former comrades and lovers.
Friendly Fire, recreates, through a series of flashback
sequences, the arrest and torture of the four men, the brutality
of the military regime, and the suppression all popular opposition.
And for those with some understanding of Brazilian history in
the early 1970s, these sequences also point to the fact that the
urban guerrilla groups, and their perspective of bank-robberies
and terror against the regime, had reached a dead-end.
The main weakness of Friendly Fire is its tendency to
skim the surface of the political and emotional issues it raises.
The film is surprisingly shortonly 76 minutesfor such
a serious subject, no doubt indicating that countless unresolved
political and emotional questions still remain from this period
of Brazilian history.
Youth in poverty
Several films were shown dealing with youth poverty. They included
From the Edge of the City (Greece), Leaf on a Pillow
(Indonesia) and The Little Girl Who Sold "The Sun".
Leaf on a Pillow, which will be reviewed in a later
article, is a sincere drama dealing with the situation facing
homeless youth in Indonesia. From the Edge of the City
by Constantinos Giannaris, is about teenagers of Greek ethnic
origins who grew up in Russia and, following the liquidation of
the Soviet Union, have come to live on the outskirts of Athens.
A subject with much potential, the film is pretentious and tends
to worship the cycle of drug-taking, petty thievery, whoring and
other activities dominating the lives of these young men.
The best of the three films is The Little Girl Who Sold
"The Sun", the last film produced by Djibril Diop
Mambéty, an acclaimed Senegalese director who died, aged
53, in Paris last year whilst undergoing cancer treatment. Mambéty,
who began working in films as an actor, made eight films and is
most well known for Hyenas (1992) and Le Franc (1993).
His low-budget films are short optimistic pieces about Senegal's
poorvillagers, workers and street people.
The Little Girl Who Sold "The Sun" is about
a Sili, a crippled young street girl in Dakar. Sili, who can only
move around with the assistance of crutches, begs near young boys
hawking the local daily newspaper. One day after the rough boys
knock her to the ground and humiliate her, she decides to stop
begging and sell newspapers like everyone else. Her first day
selling is an immediate success but then she has to face new attempts
by other newspaper hawkers to intimidate or drive her away. This
sparse but beautiful film about courage and determination is the
second of a series of films entitled Stories of Ordinary People.
The first in Mambety's series was the prize-winning Le Franc,
which concerns a poverty-stricken street musician in Dakar, way
behind in his rent, who finds some money and buys a lottery ticket.
The ticket wins but because the ticket is stuck to his door, the
only way he can collect his winnings is by presenting the door.
The story centres on his attempts to claim the prize.
Commenting on the series Mambéty said: "Ordinary
people are important because they are the only ones who are consistent.
They are the only people who are naïve, which is why courage
is theirs ... It is also a way of paying a tribute to the courage
of street children. The love of children encourages me to defy
the old, the corrupt and those who are rich, without being rich
in their souls."
Vacuous picture postcards
Many of the films screened, however, failed to approach the
simple honesty of The Little Girl Who Sold "The Sun",
or even attempt to deepen the audience's sensitivities to society
and life in general. This is no surprise, considering the political
confusion and troubled times in which we live. But a sincere attempt
to produce an authentic work, even if it fails, is superior to
those that never even attempt to go beyond the usual clichés.
Perhaps the most frustrating films screened were picture postcard-style
worksthe cinematic equivalents of vacuous coffee-table booksthat
combine spectacularly photographed scenery with mysticism or confused
calls for a return to the simplicities of pre-capitalist society.
The Tree of Life, Heart of Light, and Under California:
The Limit of Time fit into this category.
The Tree of Life from Iran, written and directed by
Farhad Mehranfa, is a part documentary, part folk-tale, romanticising
nomadic life in the spectacular Talesh Mountains, in northern
Iran. The film appears to be an attempt to emulate Mohsen Makhmalbaf's
Gabbeh but lacks the poetry or soul of that film. It has
no real character development and relies almost entirely on the
scenery and costumes to maintain audience interest. The film's
central message is direct but superficiallife would be healthier
and happier if this supposedly idyllic existence could be protected
from encroaching modern civilisation.
Heart of Light, directed by Jacob Gronlykke, is the
first full-length feature film produced in the Inuit language.
Set and filmed entirely in Greenland by a Danish production company,
Heart of Light is a confused film. Early scenes consist
of a fairly accurate and convincing portrayal of the life and
social problems confronting native Greenlanders. The second half
is self-indulgent and mystical.
The film's main protagonist is Rasmus Lynge, a native-born
Greenlander whose father supported Danish control of the vast
island. Rasmus' father dreamed of a modern Greenland, a place
of social reform and plenty. The reality, however, for Greenlanders
is a disaster with poverty, unemployment, sub-standard housing
and education, and rampant alcoholism. Rasmus, who attempts to
maintain old customs and traditions, has a serious drinking problem
and is losing touch with his wife and two sons, and reality.
Rasmus' drunken behaviour at a birthday party ultimately results
in the suicide of one of his sons and the murder of another son's
girlfriend. Shaken by this tragedy, Rasmus leaves town and sets
out with his husky-dog sled across Greenland's icy wastes. In
the course of his journey across some astonishing Arctic scenery
Rasmus encounters two European tourists, a rescue helicopter that
is trying save him, and Qivittoq, a strange long-haired ghostlike
hermit. Qivittoq leads Rasmus him to a mystical place where he
discovers a secret message engraved on a hunting rifle given to
his father by the Danish king years ago. This discovery, and several
other mysterious events, allows Rasmus to reconcile himself with
the past and overcome his trauma.
Heart of Light is Gronlykke's first feature and not
an auspicious beginning. Prior to making this film he worked in
television and was for many years the creative director for advertising
and communications giant Saatchi and Saatchinot the best
training grounds for the cultivation and development of artistic
rigor, let alone the quest for aesthetic truth.
Under California: The Limit of Time, by Mexican filmmaker
Carlos Bolado, opens in southern California with Damian, the film's
main character, accidentally running down a pregnant Mexican woman
in his pickup truck near the American-Mexican border. Damian,
who is a successful environmental artist, flees the accident,
but guilt-ridden and unable to cope with the mental trauma, decides
to leave his wife and travel south into the Mexican desert to
locate his indigenous grandmother's gravesite.
On reaching the desert he torches his car and sets off across
the barren land. His journey becomes a cathartic experience in
which he confronts the ghosts of Jesuit missionaries and the local
indigenous people, discovers his own mortality and comes to terms
with the trauma of the accident. The film concludes with the spiritually
reinvigorated Damian making his way back to California, his wife
and their new baby.
Publicity notes describe the film as "part passion, part
western, and part road movie" and a "breathtaking homage
to the powers of nature, art, ritual and love". These banal
phrases do little to disguise the artistic emptiness and generally
reactionary message of this film. To assert that the problems
confronting Damian, and by implication those facing humanity as
a whole, can be resolved via a simple pilgrimage into the wilderness
and one's inner soul, is an evasion.
See Also:
It All Starts Today: A film
by Bertrand Tavernier, starring Philippe Torreton and Maria Pitarresi
A work of authenticity, artistic substance and optimism
[10 July 1999]
An interview with Bertrand Tavernier
[10 July 1999]
Outskirts and Checkpoint:
two films from Russia
[17 July 1999]
A conversation with director Petr Lutsik
[17 July 1999]
Earth, written and directed by Deepa
Mehta
One of this century's human tragedies, as witnessed by a child
[21 July 1999]
My Name is Joe
Well-deserved accolades for new Loach film
[24 July 1999]
Also see the WSWS reviews of:
The
Hole
The Power of Kangwon Province
The Adopted Son
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