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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
2001 Toronto International Film FestivalPart 3
Struggling, alive, contradictory...
By Joanne Laurier
4 October 2001
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Under the Skin of the City is the seventh feature film
directed by leading female Iranian filmmaker, Rakhshan Bani-Etemad.
The treatment of social issues in her films, including several
documentaries, has run her afoul of the Iranian government. Set
at the time of the parliamentary elections of 1997, her latest
film is a dramatic and complex portrayal of the travails of a
family in a working class suburb of Tehran.
In the films opening sequence, Tooba, an older factory
worker, is being videoed on the role of women in the upcoming
elections. Unable to deliver what is apparently a scripted, sanitized
speech, Tooba walks away from the camera. She is employed in an
all-female textile plant and it is made clear that she is the
Mother Courage of the factory. Despite their lethal working conditions
(lung disease is prevalent as a result of the fiber-drenched air),
the women, always buttressed by Tooba, seize each opportunity
for camaraderie offered by the communal quality of factory life,
opportunities unavailable elsewhere. They share their food at
lunch and comfort each other throughout a series of personal problems.
Toobas oldest son, Abbas, is putting all his efforts
into obtaining a visa to work in Japan in the hopes of improving
the familys fortunes. A younger son is becoming increasingly
involved in anti-government activity, threatening his education
and his career. Toobas disabled husband lectures the boy,
after an arrest, about the futility of political activity, a road
taken in the formers youth. The oldest daughter is the constant
victim of spousal abuse triggered by poverty. The battered daughter
seeks shelter in her mothers home only to be heartbreakingly
returned to her husband. Tooba cannot feed her pregnant daughter
or her beloved grandchild.
Abbas sells the family home to speed up the buying of his visa
and is swindled by the visa sellers. In a desperate attempt to
obtain money to buy back the house, Abbas goes to a wealthy, crooked
businessman who gets him to smuggle drugs. His younger brother
thwarts the operation, sending Abbas into hiding and the family
out into the street.
Under the Skin of the City is a valuable work because
its subjects are recognizable human beings who have not been destroyed
by adversity. They navigate an inhuman social system with varying
degrees of consciousness, disarmed by confusion and illusions,
but never by resignation. Albeit the uniqueness of locale and
attire, the problems and circumstances of Toobas family
are universal in their content and spirit. In this vein, the critique
of the veil is very striking: women and girls going about their
daily lives encumbered by a ridiculous apparatus. They eat in
pizza parlors, talk on cell phones, do sports, looking harassed
by their attire.
The characters are not presented simply as victims of an irrational
and harsh society. They are real people, who battle everything,
who make mistakes and hopefully learn something for the next battle.
Although the film does not paint a way out, it is not beset by
gloom. In each circumstance, the film draws out something of the
strengths and problems of the Iranian working class, and more
widely, something of the strengths and problems of its international
counterparts. The movie is not case specific to the Iranian working
class. Ms. Bani-Etemad in a recent interview spoke of the palpable
commonalities of different cultures and that she considered
cinema as a social commitment and catalyst for
a world audience.
The patient tempo and documentary-like style of Under the
Skin of the City allows deep reservoirs of restlessness and
discontent to surface in a population that took part in toppling
the Shah, in a population whose aspirations have been systematically
crushed by the reactionary semi-feudal clerics who replaced him.
Speaking about another film involving the same suburb of Tehran
as Under the Skin of the City, Bani-Etemad comments: One
of the films features was that it was different from TV
reports that show people as being always thankful and satisfied
with everything. They did not have the same conservatism that
is imposed on them by the TV. They therefore said what they expected
of the revolution and what they had actually gotten.
In the final scene, Tooba is again being filmed. She speaks
directly to the camera: There was a time when we complained,
but you said we were fighting a war. It was the truth, so we accepted
it. After the war you asked us for patience, because the country
was in ruins. So once again we put up with it all. Now there is
someone who wants to save us, so Im here to vote...
Voice: Sorry, Maam, were having technical
difficulties. Please start over.
Tooba: Just forget about it! I lost my house, my son
ran away and people are filming all the time. I wish someone would
come and film whats going on right here! (She points
to her heart.) Right here! Who the hell do you show these
films to anyway?! This was perhaps the best moment in any
film at the film festival.
The Pinochet Case
Patricio Guzmans El Caso Pinochet (The Pinochet
Case) is a documentary concerning the events that led to the arrest
of Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet in October 1998 in
London. Pinochet was arrested on an extradition warrant issued
by Spanish Judge Baltasar Garzon for the disappearance
of more than 3,100 Chileans and foreigners during the military
coup he led in 1973 and his subsequent 17-year dictatorship. Guzman,
who has made several documentaries concerning the Pinochet coup
and dictatorship [ The Battle of Chile I, II, III
(1973-79); Chile, The Obstinate Memory (1997)],
focuses his latest film on the details of the Spanish case and
Judge Garzons 50 to 60 direct witnessessurvivors of
torture and relatives of the victims. Interviews with the witnesses,
scattered throughout the documentary, provide horrifying and emotional
testimony of the heinous crimes of a dictatorship aided and abetted
by the American CIA.
Guzman follows the case to London where Pinochet was under
house arrest for 503 days. There is footage of an extraordinary
visit to his palatial quarters by former Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher who had described the general at a Conservative Party
conference as the only political prisoner in Britain.
The film shows her greeting Pinochet as a great friend who
had brought democracy to Chile, adding How much we
owe you for the Falklands campaign! It was a chilling moment.
Also shown is Pinochets return to Chile, welcomed as
a hero by his supporters and sections of the army at the airport,
where he rose out of his wheelchair gesticulating defiantly. Finally,
Guzman documents the halting of the proceedings against Pinochet
after three years of international efforts to place him on trial.
The film ends with a lingering shot of a statue of Salvador Allende,
the president killed by Pinochets forces during the coup.
Allendes memory, the film implies, will inspire a future
reckoning with the dictator. This may be the case but not in the
way envisioned by Guzman. It was the political treachery of Allendes
Socialist Party in collusion with the Communist Party that disarmed
the working class and permitted the Chilean and American bourgeoisie
to drown a revolutionary opportunity in blood.
Another indictment of the French Revolution
Veteran French filmmaker Eric Rohmer has joined the chorus
of intellectuals and filmmakers who take for granted that the
French Revolution of 1789 was one of historys bloody abominations
(Quills, Sade, most recently). LAnglaise
et le duc (The Lady and the Duke) launches Rohmer into
his fourth decade of filmmaking. Perhaps hes been at it
too long. The new film is a departure from his normal preoccupation,
more or less insightful explorations into the relations among
the articulate French middle class (My Night at Maudes,
Claires Knee, etc.).
Rohmers new film is based on the memoirs of Grace Ellliot,
a Scottish aristocrat whose personal relationship with the monarchy
found her trapped in Paris when the revolution broke out. She
is a vicious anti-Jacobin, who has a close friendship with Philippe
Egalité, Duke of Orléans and cousin
of Louis XVI, King of France. The duke is a middle-of-the-road
supporter of the initial stages of the revolution, in no small
measure because it will help him save his neck. Even though Orléans
votes for the beheading of the king, his efforts to secure Graces
safety send them both to the guillotine. Conversations between
the two main characters constitute the films core. As in
all of Rohmers work, the revelation and discovery of character
occur through bouts of intense dialogue. LAnglaise et
le duc is more of a revelation about its creators ideological
bankruptcy than anything else. However masterfully Rohmer has
digitally recreated eighteenth century Paris, his artistry is
subordinated to a very reactionary and stupid goal.
See Also:
2001 Toronto International
Film FestivalPart 2
Five films on historical and political themes
[27 September 2001]
2001 Toronto International
Film FestivalPart 1
The success and failure of the international Style of Quality
in cinema
[21 September 2001]
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