ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
51st Sydney Film Festival--Part 1
Some positive signals
By Richard Phillips
6 July 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
This is the first in a series of articles on the 51st Sydney
Film Festival, held June 11-26, 2004.
After several years of financial difficulties, this years
Sydney Film Festival saw a marked upturn in attendances34
sessions were sold out compared to eight the previous year, with
a 38 percent increase in overall ticket sales.
Beyond these raw figures, important as they are for the financial
health of the festival, the annual event was extended by several
days to a full two weeks to screen over 280 movies. While the
program included its fair share of commercial products and so-called
independent moviesworks with little to say but selected
because they could guarantee large audiencesa number of
features, many by first-time filmmakers, genuinely grappled with
the plight of ordinary people. These are healthy signs that some
filmmakers have been deeply affected by contemporary events and
are trying to use their artistic skills to enlighten and change
the world.
Reflecting widespread concern about the eruption of US militarism
and the undermining of democratic rights, the festival also screened
a number of documentaries examining these themes. They included
Control Room, about the Al Jazeerah network and the US-led
invasion of Iraq (see: Rather timid
considering the circumstances), and Anthem, an
Australian documentary examining the Howard governments
participation in the US-led attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq and
its callous treatment of refugees. While these documentaries and
others, to be examined in future articles, were not entirely successful,
they were serious and humane. Another important component of the
festival was a comprehensive retrospective of influential post-WWII
Italian film director Michelangelo Antonioni, which will be discussed
in a later review.
Some of the best features watched by this writer during the
festival event were, Blind Flight (John Furse [United Kingdom]),
Days of Santiago (Josué Méndez [Peru]) and
Uniform (Diao Yinan [China]), all first films by their
directors. Memories of Murder (Bong Joon-Ho [South Korea])
and Silent Waters (Sabiha Sumar [Pakistan]), which have
already been reviewed by the World Socialist Web Site, were
among other thoughtful works that were screened and deserve wider
distribution. The strength of these films rests in their sincere
and compassionate attempts to explore the social and material
circumstances shaping the lives and personalities of their protagonists.
Uniform, written and directed by Diao Yinan, tells the
story of Wang Xiaojiana, a young man in a decaying Chinese industrial
city. Wang works in his familys small tailoring shop but,
like other young people in the city, his future is grim. When
his ageing father is hospitalised, the family is forced into debt
and Wang tries to secure a job at a local state-owned factory.
The factory, however, is downsizing, and Wang is mistaken for
management and physically attacked by a group of protesting dismissed
employees. Management and police then accuse him of being the
ringleader of the angry workers. Wang later wins some money in
a card game with some small time gangsters, but they mug him and
take back their money.
One evening, after heavy rain drenches his clothes, Wang starts
wearing a police shirt that has been left for repair at the tailor
shop, but never picked up. Wang not only discovers that he is
now treated with respect but the uniform gives him the ability
to collect bribes from passing motorists and small businesses.
He is also able to win the heart of Zheng Sasha, a local girl,
who is leading a double life as well. By day she works in a shop
selling pirated CDs, by night as a bar girl in a sleazy club.
Wang and Zheng become close friends, helping each other maintain
their double identities. This strange relationship provides them
with a temporary escape from the drudgery and loneliness of their
lives, even as they start to fall foul of police and local gangsters.
Uniform is a low budget production with long takes and
minimal dialogue and editing. It has, however, an unusual authenticity
and immediacy that perfectly captures the underlying social tensions
and pace of life in the bleak city, as the Chinese bureaucracy
slashes jobs in state-owned industries.
Days of Santiago, directed by Josué Méndez,
is a portrait of the personal and social disorientation of a Peruvian
soldier following his demobilisation and return to civilian life
in the working class slums of Lima. Like many others of his generation,
23-year-old Santiago has been deeply disturbed by his experiences
in the military. The years away from home have also destroyed
his marriage, and his wife leaves him a few weeks after his return.
Santiago has no work, no money and little future but refuses
to join his former military friends in various criminal activities.
He becomes a taxi driver, hoping to accumulate some money, get
an education and find a way out of the cycle of poverty that forced
him into the army in the first place. But he has been so brutalised
in the military, and the economic and cultural poverty at home
has become so bad over the years, that he cannot adjust to civilian
life. Relations within his family are strained to breaking point
and spiral out of control when Santiago strikes up a relationship
with his brothers wife. The young woman hopes Santiago will
provide her with some escape from her violent husband.
Méndez, who was born in Lima and studied filmmaking
at Yale University in the US, has created a dark and disturbing
film. A strong performance by Pietro Sibille as Santiago, tight
close-ups and a combination of black and white and colour photography,
help to recreate the social disorientation and dysfunctional character
of the former soldiers life. Like thousands of other economic
conscripts in Peru and elsewhere, young men like Santiago are
treated as cannon fodder, then thrown onto the scrap heap and
a life of deep despair, when they are of no further use to the
powers-that-be.
Superficial products
By contrast, the widely promoted The Life and Death
of Peter Sellers, a drama starring Geoffrey Rush as the talented
British actor/comedian, and De-lovely, a musical biography
of composer Cole Porter (1891-1964) directed by Irwin Winkler,
scripted by Jay Cocks (Gangs of New York) and starring
Kevin Kline, were disappointing and failed to go beyond the obvious.
Porter, one of Americas greatest songwriters, has been
a source of inspiration for generations of jazz musicians, popular
singers and songwriters. De-lovely, which employed a musical
within a musical technique, with the dying Porter, who became
a semi-invalid after a bad horse-riding accident in 1937, directing
a Broadway show of his own life, mainly focused on the composers
homosexuality and his difficult marriage to Linda Lee (Ashely
Judd). It gave no real indication of the complex social and artistic
influences that underlay Porters remarkable talent.
Winklers film also included cameos appearances by Robbie
Williams, Alanis Morrisette, Sheryl Crow, Elvis Costello and other
pop stars singing some of Porters classics. This will no
doubt draw new audiences to the film, and to Porters music,
but the soul of his great works seems to have been lost in the
process.
The Life and Death of Peter Sellers, directed by Stephen
Hopkinson was even shallower. Sellers comedic influenceshis
theatrical work at an early age, the war years and his membership
of The Goon Show, the hilarious satirical postwar
British radio programwere virtually ignored. The film contained
one Goon Show segment, but it gave no hint of the programs
subversive humour and did not indicate the influence of figures
like Spike Milligan, who wrote the show, and fellow Goon, Harry
Secombe, on Sellers. Milligan (Edward Tudor-Pole), perhaps one
of the most influential British comedians in the past 50 years,
appears spasmodically throughout the film without any real dialogue.
The movie pays scant attention to Sellers brilliant performances
in early works such as The Ladykillers, Im All
Right Jack, The Mouse That Roared and other classics.
Sellers collaboration with Stanley Kubrick and James Mason
in Lolita is not mentioned and his extraordinary acting
in Dr Strangelove is reduced to a few moments. Like De-lovely,
Hopkinsons film is preoccupied with the sexual activities
and personal problems of its central characters.
Sellers was obviously a complex and difficult man, but the
film, despite an energetic performance by Geoffrey Rush, failed
to adequately recapture his artistry. Fortunately, Sellers
early radio and film work is available on CD and DVD for those
who want to experience his comic genius.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |