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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
2000 Vancouver International Film FestivalPart 1
Drama, protest, sensuality
By David Walsh
19 October 2000
Use
this version to print
But with the true artist, the social formula that
he recommends is a matter of secondary importance; the source
of his art, its animating spirit, is decisiveRosa
Luxemburg, 1918
The recent Vancouver International Film Festival presented
some two hundred films. One of the festival's strengths is East
Asian works. I had the opportunity to see 16 films from Japan,
South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Singapore and Indonesia, along
with another 15 or so from other parts of the world. The festival
also screened a number of interesting works I had seen elsewhere,
including BariwaliThe Lady of the House, Bye Bye
Africa, The Circle, The Day I Became a Woman,
George Washington, The Legends of Rita, Platform,
The Thief of St. Lubin and Yi Yi.
It is difficult, but continually necessary, to pinpoint those
qualities that one finds appealing in a work of art. After reading
passages in a number of novels sitting on a bookstore shelf, why
do we select one work as opposed to another? We reject this because
the author is merely showing off, that due to his or her sneering
tone, another because the characters or circumstances hold no
interest for us, a fourth because the language is banal, a fifth
out of impatience, and so forth.
And there are combinations of words that inevitably catch our
eye. I know, for example, that I could never resist a novel one
of whose chapters opens in the following manner: Cytherea
entered her bedroom, and flung herself on the bed, bewildered
by a whirl of thought (Thomas Hardy's Desperate Remedies).
There is something about the girl's absurd name, the bedroom,
the whirl of thought, the implication perhaps of a
response to an oppressed condition (which, in fact, it turns out
to be) that has a magic effect on me: drama, protest, sensuality.
A film begins, and within a few seconds one knows a good deal,
often too much. A crucial element established very quickly is
whether or not the filmmaker is going to make demands on the spectator's
brain. Establishing shots (the exterior of a house or building,
a street, the skyline of a city, etc.), although not necessarily
fatal, make me nervous about the filmmaker's intentions. I would
prefer to be plunged into the midst of things in a dizzying fashion
and disoriented momentarily. It's best, all things considered,
to work problems out for oneself. Of course the film that is inaccessible
to even the most attentive viewer is also a failure.
It seems to me the filmmaker has to assume a state of utter
receptivity in the spectator, even though this is a considerable
assumption given the pressures of everyday life and the general
state of culture. The filmmaker, at least the one not solely concerned
with immediate popular or financial success, is obliged to approach
the spectator at the highest level, within the given intellectual
boundaries of the day. The viewer has the right to be taken seriously,
as someone capableproviding an effort is madeof recognizing
the essence of any situation. A work produced on such a basis
always criticizes and improves prevailing consciousness.
Naturally, the spectator is not an empty vessel. He or she
is always on the look-out for something. I freely acknowledge
that I operate at a film festival like a detective, stalking certain
kinds of pictures and words. I'm looking first of all for a work
possessing all the qualities I find in Hardy's sentence: the drawing
together in images of what seem to me to be the most intriguing
and urgent elements in life in such a manner that these elements
take on a spontaneous life of their own and lead the way to unexpected
conclusions. That drawing together can take an infinite variety
of shapes, although we all no doubt have our personal predilections.
Given a choice, I suppose, I would prefer a work whose form had
something cool and reserved about it, driven from within by white-hot
intensity.
I'm searching first of all for a formal rigor that speaks presumably
to an intellectual or moral rigor in the artistic personalities
creating it. Above all, the image of a human being, in
whatever surroundings and framed in whatever manner, taken
seriously, which is to say both sympathetically and critically.
Having adopted that stancewhich in reality cannot be separated
out from the production of the work as a wholethe director,
writer and performers, it seems to me, would have a difficult
time entirely avoiding making genuine discoveries.
As this is not a perfect world, works through which currents
of heat and cold, grandeur and simplicity, universality and the
everyday continuously flow are not that numerous. At the Vancouver
festival I was struck by a number of films and a number of individual
images. The works that seemed most serious and poetic to me were
Akihiro Suzuki's Looking for Angel from Japan and Bundled,
directed by Singing Chen, from Taiwan. Lee Chang-Dong's Peppermint
Candy from South Korea is a disturbing film about a onetime
secret policeman. Kim Sang-Jin's Attack the Gas Station
and Bong Joon-Ho's Barking Dogs Never Bite also from
South Koreahave their remarkable moments.
Looking for Angel, which I'll write about separately,
appealed to me because of its casual, informal feel, combined
with an intense protest against brutality and repression. As I
suggested above in relation to Hardy's lines, we all succumb to
certain sentences or pictures and thereby to the work as a whole.
In the case of Looking for Angel, the surrender took place
at the moment when the three principal characters (two male and
one female) have faced a variety of desires and difficulties in
the course of an evening and the narrator's voiceover shots
of wet city streets, streetcars and umbrellassays: It
was raining the next morning. We had breakfast in a café
and talked of many unimportant things. Takachi and Reiko spoke
of a boy that I'd never met. I saw him weeping a little.
A remarkable combination of artistic sensibility, tact and emotional
precision is at work here.
In some films a single moment may impress itself on the viewer.
In a Japanese short, oddly named The Idiotic Scooter Girl:
Sad Radios (Obitani Yuri), we see a girl, who's been trying
to sell cheap plastic radios, sitting despondently or blankly
on a set of stairs leading down to the basement of an apartment
building, illuminated by yellow light. In Agnès Varda's
The Gleaners and I, there is a conversation conducted by
the filmmaker with a homeless ex-truck driver who lives by picking
through garbage.
Tragedies in Iraq, Indonesia
Not every work has a primarily aesthetic appeal. Some things
need to be said no matter how. A film that deserves to be seen
everywhere is John Pilger's Paying the Price, a documentary
about the atrocities perpetrated against the Iraqi population,
particularly its children, by the Western powers through UN sanctions.
Pilger, a British journalist, points out that the sanctions, strenuously
supported by the US and Britain in particular, have killed more
than the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan combined. Denis Halliday,
the former Assistant UN Secretary Generalwho resigned his
post in protest against the anti-Iraqi policycomments that
Washington and London will be slaughtered in history
books for their murderous role. Robin Cook, British foreign secretary,
refused to be interviewed by Pilger. He apparently didn't want
to appear in a film with dying babies. An unrepentant
James Rubin, the US State Department official, permitted himself
to be questioned. He explains blandly that the pursuit of sanctions
is one of those real decisions that has real consequences
which governments must make.
A Poet (Unconcealed Poetry) is remarkable for its frank
treatment of the 1965 massacre carried out by the Indonesian military
and reactionary forceswith the full support of the CIA and
the US governmentagainst members of the Communist Party
and all opponents of the Indonesian elite. Garin Nugroho directed
the film, which is based on the memories of Ibrahim Kadir, a poet
from the province of Aceh, who was imprisoned in October 1965,
but survived. Kadir, now 56, plays himself 35 years ago. The film
takes place in two cells, one for men and one for women, in Takengon
prison. Prisoners whose names are called out are led away and
executed, beheaded, like goats.
Life is for the brave ... history is the record of the
winners, says one detainee. The film, although it contains
no scenes of the carnage, is chilling. A title at the end notes
that the prosecutor in charge at Takengon shot himself. It further
notes that five hundred thousand, and by certain estimates two
million people, were killed in the massacre. It must be of some
significance that such a film can now be made in Indonesia.
More Iranian films
Film history may eventually determine that the phase of Iranian
cinema history that began in the wake of the 1979 revolution reached
its peak, or a peak, in any case, in the middle of the 1990s,
with films like Through the Olive Trees and A Moment
of Innocence. Time will tell. In any event, as a national
cinema Iran continues to produce a stream of generally substantial
and sometimes beautiful works. If they are secondary works in
comparison to those mentioned, they at least tower above, by and
large, the most hard-hitting and insightful
products of Hollywood.
Daughters of the Sun (Mariam Shahriar) treats the deplorable
status of women in Iran and adds to it a deep sense of social
injustice. Amangol is one of six daughters. Her father, desperate
for money, shaves her head and sends her off, in men's clothing,
to work as an apprentice weaver. She's employed by a brutal carpet
dealer, who beats his employees when they cause problems. Aman,
as the young woman is now called, arouses the love of a fellow
female employee, who urges marriage.
An earthquake killed one female employee's family. All
that was left was me and a cow. I'd tell myself This is
a dream.' Unfortunately, this is no dream, but life, or
some awful version of life. Aman's crushed, numbed face dominates
the film. One hardship after another befalls her. The death of
her beloved mother is a particularly severe blow. She only learns
about it later. They didn't have money for her operation.
She suffered so much till she died. In the end, she sets
fire to the weaving shed and walks off into the barren countryside
in women's clothing. The film is spare and severe, unforgiving.
I'm not certain it provides enough opportunity for a spectator
to mobilize his or her own emotions fully, but it is a serious
work.
Rassul Sadr Ameli's The Girl in the Sneakers is an intelligent
film and it managed to hold the attention of several hundred Vancouver
high school students at the showing I attended, which one would
think is no mean feat. A teenage couple is taking a stroll in
the park in broad daylight. Incredibly, a policeman stops them
and takes them into custody, simply because they're unmarried
and unrelated! The girl is subjected to a medical examination,
to ascertain whether she's still a virgin. Her parents are outraged
... at their daughter. The girl, reasonably enough, runs away
from the whole stinking lot of them. Her boyfriend doesn't turn
out to be much help either. Anyway, she spends the night wandering
around Tehran, encountering the rougher side of the city. Ameli's
film not an earthshaking work, but it has its moments.
A young Afghan laborer is the central figure in Djomeh,
directed by Hassan Yektapanah. He's working on a dairy farm in
Iran. Djomeh embarrassed his family by falling in love with an
older woman, a widow, in Afghanistan and they sent him away. Now
he's stuck on this isolated farm, with another Afghan laborer,
who's supposed to look out for him, and the owner, a brusque man
with a pickup truck. On their way to and from town Djomeh and
his boss discuss life and love.
The Afghan develops feelings for the daughter of the local
store owner and keeps going back for cans of food he doesn't need.
Custom and everything else prevent her from speaking to him. In
the end he asks his boss to act as his negotiator with the girl's
father, with predictable results.
Yektapanah has worked for Abbas Kiarostami as an assistant
director (on Taste of Cherry, among other films) and the
influence is obvious (the story even bears similarities to Through
the Olive Trees). Why should we assume there's anything wrong
with that? The presence of major artists elevates the thinking
and the work of everyone around them. It's doubtful that this
film would have been made, or that it would have been made with
the degree of sensitivity and intelligence that it possesses,
without Kiarostami's influence.
A conversation with Hassan Yektapanah
The director of Djomeh, a very pleasant and gentle man,
was present at the Vancouver film festival and I spoke to him.
David Walsh: Could you briefly explain something about
your history and how you came to make this film?
Hassan Yektapanah: As a child
I was always interested in photography. I grew up in Tehran. I
came from a poor family and didn't have my own camera. We had
a few guests over one time and I stole a camera from one of them.
Which is not very nice, but I have to be honest. This camera was
one of those really old ones. It was square. It had four sides.
You have to open it, you have to hold the camera and you have
to look down from above. It was a summer's day and we had guests
over. That was the first thing I took note of when they arrived.
They were going to take a nap around noon. And after they woke
up, there was no camera. It was curiosity that made me steal the
camera.
I was 11 at the time. We were sleeping in different bedrooms.
They had put all their things in an empty room. So I went to the
room and I opened one of the suitcases and took the camera. I
remember I was terrified and I was sweating. However, we were
poor at the time. But my family had such a good name. I was so
scared because I thought someone might walk in while I was searching
for the camera and that would be really, really embarrassing.
I finally found the camera and I hit this button because I didn't
know how to use the camera. And all of a sudden, all the covers
went in different directions. I was so scared. While I was looking
at the camera I heard some noise, so I was really scared. I was
trying to get this camera into the way it was before. I couldn't
get it right so I put the camera back in the suitcase and I left.
That's how it started basically, my interest in cinema. I realized
that I could take pictures perhaps with a hidden camera. What's
really interesting is that the first movie I made was basically
made in that fashion. The authorities and the government did not
know about this movie. Which reminded of this memory about when
I was a kid. These two different stories are related, I think.
It started with a stolen camera and it ended up to be a really
big story. How it started and how it ended.
DW: What did or does your father do?
H: My dad had his own business at the time. He was doing
fine financially. His store had a fire and he went bankrupt. That's
how are family started going down and down. We started moving
to different parts, perhaps from north to south. Which meant financially
they were doing not like they used to.
DW: Why did you decide to make this particular story?
H: I was a teenager when the revolution happened in
Iran. My political activities during the revolutionary time in
Iran really helped me out. That guided my future activities regarding
cinema and everything. I was really sensitive toward what was
happening in Iran, what was going on during those years. When
I see things that aren't supposed to be happening, that gets my
attention. It could be regarding anything. Injustices. We have
approximately four millions Afghans in Iran right now. Based on
Iranian rules, they are not allowed to marry Iranians.
DW: Legally or unofficially?
H: Legally, they are not allowed to marry Iranian girls.
There used to be a different law regarding immigrants from Afghanistan,
which was quite fair. Then they started marrying Persian girls
and having two, three, four kids, then leaving the girls go back
to their country, which I find very unfair.
After this went on for years, that made the government think
about what was going on. Finally, they changed the law. They said
that you're not allowed to marry Iranians. There was still one
unsolved problem. That was the emotional part of the story. For
example, we're talking about this young guy who's an immigrant
who moved to this country and had all these hopes and everything.
Obviously as a human being he has all these emotions and feelings.
Any human beinghe could be 40 years old, he could be 20
years oldhas feelings and emotions and you have to be able
to express your feelings.
It could be anywhere in the world, no matter what nationality
or what religion you are. Like a really hungry person, who has
a big bowl of honey and is not allowed to have some. That's what
made me interested in what was going on. Did the government ever
think about the Afghans' emotions or feelings? What happened to
that part? The first part was solved, but what about the second
part?
Perhaps if you see my movie, I use a scale, which we have in
courts in Iran, as a symbol of justice. We make all these rules
and scales for justice. We put up all the borders which we have
on a map, which really don't exist. We put all these limitations
and restrictions. All different flags from different countries,
different religions, different accents, different languages. And
this is what makes us separate from each other. This is something
about us, this is not about different governments. This is about
human beings, it's not about governments. This is the subject
of my film.
DW: But the film shows another side to the problem you
mention. It shows that the local people are not very friendly
to the immigrants either, at least it suggests that. That is a
problem, that's not just the government.
H: This has been going on in Iran for years. It is part
of our tradition, which is not good. The first thing, when you
come to this earth, people relate you to your background, your
dad and your mom. If this baby has a good background, has a really
good reputation and good finances, he's lucky. And the opposite:
if this baby doesn't come from a good family with a good reputation,
he is really innocent, but he will be victimized because of his
family. And I don't think this belongs to any specific government
or country. This is about us. I was trying in my film to find
a way to deal with this kind of stuff, that will make a big difference
in our relation with different countries.
DW: The girl in the film, does she have any response,
or are we supposed to read any response, or is that the problem,
that she can't give any response to the boy?
H: I don't understand.
DW: That fact she does not respond, or is it that she
cannot respond because of social pressure?
H: She was not allowed to speak. She could have spoken
for herself, but since her father was there she was not allowed
to talk for herself.
DW: But we see her in the background. Does that indicate
her interest?
H: There are two such moments, when she is seen in the
background and also when the boy comes to the store and does not
have enough money, but she's willing to give him everything.
DW: I'm curious, what do you feel you learned from Abbas
Kiarostami?
H: I worked in a more professional cinema for 13 years
DW: More commercial cinema?
H: I'm talking about classical movies, that use a lot
of people and very expensive equipment. Big budget movies, basically.
And they were some of the most expensive films in Iran because
I had the option to choose. Once I met Mr. Kiarostami, he made
my perspective change and gave me a different outlook on cinema.
After I met Mr. Kiarostami, we talked and I got to know him better,
I realized that I'm really close to what he thinks.
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