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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
San Francisco International Film Festival 2008
Part 1: Some interesting films from newer directors
By David Walsh
10 May 2008
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This is the first of a series of articles on the 2008 San
Francisco International Film Festival, held April 24-May 8.
The recent San Francisco film festival, its 51st, screened
some 177 films from 49 countries. The festival bestowed awards
on director Mike Leigh, screenwriter Robert Towne and actress
Maria Bello, among others.
The most interesting films we were able to see came from Brazil
(Mutum), Lebanon (Under the Bombs), Israel (Vasermil),
the Philippines (Huling Balyan Ng Buhi: Or The Woven Stories
of the Other), China (Umbrella), Malaysia (Flower
in the Pocket), Greece (Valse Sentimentale), Mexico
(Cochochi), India (Calcutta, My Love), Japan (Glasses),
France (All is Forgiven) and South Korea (Shadows in
the Palace).
The better contemporary art or independent films are naturally
varied in approach and theme, in overall style as well. Yet the
variations, viewed from the widest angle, are not as great as
one might expect or even hope for. Many of the films seem to emanate,
so to speak, from the same portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
This demonstrates in the first place the primacy of the objective
circumstances in which the artists matured and developed, and
which help shape their work.
The largest category treats the individual lives of ordinary
people (often children or adolescents), without bombast, over
the course of a few days, weeks or months. Non-professional actors
often are involved. Sets, if any, and costumes and camera movement
are kept to a minimum. (Calcutta, My Love, which attempts
to deal with a period in Indian political and cultural history,
and Shadows in the Palace, an elaborate costume drama,
are the most obvious exceptions here.) Budgetary issues and in
some cases inexperience play a certain role, but there is more
to it than that. As weve pointed out before, a kind of self-regulatingoccasionally,
overly self-consciousminimalism is at work.
An increasing number of films globally are taking a serious
approach to social life and the conditions under which vast numbers
of people live. The filmmakers often bring more compassion to
bear than they do historical or social insight. Thats to
be expected after a quarter-century or more of ideological reaction.
The painful facts of present-day lifewar, oppression, social
inequalityhave taken the artists, in many cases, unawares.
This is not perhaps what they expected to be considering. They
are a little awkward with the material, over-cautious, even timid.
The writers and directors in general are still loath to make
generalizations or draw conclusions. They say, Here is a
small picture, a detailmake of it what you will. The
confidence to draw broader conclusions was knocked out of cinema
and the other arts by the traumatic events of the middle and late
20th century. In recent decades everything weak and vulnerable
within these social layers has been played upontheir self-involvement,
insularity, impressionism.
The deepest critique of society, at least in America, was criminalized
or made taboo. A good many in the film industry, including its
independent wing, became wealthy and had even less
reason to concern themselves with great social problems. The argument
that the world couldnt be altered anyway, and that every
effort at improving society or perfecting humanity had simply
led to disaster, proved far too tempting for individuals whose
bank accounts happened to be swelling.
Along with all that came an assault on the idea that art could
or ought to attempt to arrive at objective truths. The notion
that art works reflect an external reality and that a chief responsibility
of the artist is to communicate something essential about that
realitya simple, and one might say, obvious enough, conceptionhas
come under ferocious attack for decades.
Now there is a change, brought about by new shocks and big
events. The social order that promised the end of history
and a new Golden Age threatens to hurl humanity back into the
hell of world war, dictatorship and mass suffering. People see
and feel the reality in front of them. No one believes the governments
or any official institution or spokesperson. But what then?
The artists dont know yet. They still know better what
they disbelieve, what they reject. Many art or independent films
today tend to be defined by what they wont be or
do: they wont make large statements; they wont aspire
to the epic or panoramic; they wont insist on any social
or political viewpoint; they wont attempt to explain
(a word always placed in inverted commas) any social or historical
process. Of the group mentioned above, the French film, All
is Forgiven, follows this program with the most determination.
Not everything here is wrong. Propaganda art, at
the service of vile regimes, did grievous damage in the last century.
Terrible betrayals occurred. And even at a less catastrophic level,
much of the pre-war socially conscious art (influenced by or oriented
to Stalinism or social democracy) was passive, uninspired, and
pat. An injection of the personal, the spontaneous, the authorial
eye (and I) was healthy, and, at any rate, inevitable.
However, once the principle of independent or authorial
filmmaking has been established, and no one has any interest in
politically or ideologically supervising the artist, the latter
still has to arrive at definite conclusions about the present
human condition. Or face stagnation. Once the newness and liveliness
of the activity wear off a little, a deeper uncertainty and passivity
remain. And so does the following question: whats to be
done about the existing state of things?
A good deal of the relative sameness of international art filmmaking
comes from the tacit agreement about what must not be done. The
primitiveness, the tentativeness of the social outlook and artistic
means give a good many films a similar look and feel. Plants that
have not yet blossomed bear more resemblance to one another than
flowering ones. Filmmaking has not yet drawn itself up to its
full height. But there are hopeful signs. Efforts are being made.
New directors for the most part
In general, and this is perhaps a positive sign, the better
films at San Francisco often came from first-time feature directors,
sometimes from a younger generation.
Mutum, directed by Sandra Kogut (who has previously
made short films and documentaries), is the story of a ten-year-old
boy and his family in an impoverished part of Brazil. Kogutborn
in 1965 of Hungarian descent and now residing in Parissensitively
presents the details of life, which include jealousy, casual violence
and tragedy. The boys father is rough on his son, but, as
the director explains, not out of malevolence, but because he
believes that sensitivity is a luxury he cant allow himself
under the harsh conditions. This is a realistic work, but not
a drab or passive one.

This is the second year in a row that a valuable film from
Brazil was screened in San Francisco, following up on last years
Love for Sale: Suely in the Sky (directed by Karim Aïnouz).
Lebanese director Phillippe Aractingi began filming Under
the Bombs ten days into the savage Israeli assault on Lebanon
in the summer of 2006. For his second feature film, Aractingi
(born 1964) rapidly invented a story about an affluent woman,
who has been abroad, looking for her family in southern Lebanon.
She hires the only taxi driver willing to undertake the dangerous
trip. The scenes of devastation are especially striking. This
is also an intelligent and sensitive work, without a specific
political agenda, except revulsion at brutality.

Vasermil, from Israel, recounts the story of three teenagersan
Israeli-born pizza deliveryman, an Ethiopian responsible for his
mother and brother and a Russian involved with drugs and local
lowlifesconnected by a local soccer team. Directed by Mushon
Salmona, the films picture of Israeli everyday life, dominated
by seething social tensions and verbal or physical violence (not
to mention fairly pervasive racism), is a stark one.

Huling Balyan Ng Buhi: Or The Woven Stories of the Other
is an effort to deal poetically with life in the southern Philippines.
Various groups and individuals intersect in the film, written
and directed by the youthful Sherad Anthony Sanchez (born 1984
in Davao City), including members of an armed guerrilla band,
a military unit, a shaman and two children lost in the forest.
Sanchezs film is ambitious and not entirely successful,
but it is a promising effort. Filipino cinema has been in the
doldrums for years.

The Chinese documentary Umbrella, directed by Du Haibin,
examines growing social inequality and other problems in the aftermath
or midst of economic reform, i.e., the sweeping introduction
of market economics. In its opening sequence, we see a sign bearing
a government slogan, Social stability is above everything.
The umbrella of the title is evidently an ironic reference to
the new China, which presumably is able to shelter differing groups.
More mundanely, the film contains scenes of monotonous, ill-paid
labor in an umbrella factory in Guangdong province and also visits
the shop that sells the umbrellas, where some dreadful female
examples of the Chinese nouveau riche talk about their
cars, their hubbies and their money. Outside women
and girls shine shoes for pennies. In his notes, the director
points out that under the governments policy of encouraging
a small part of the people to get rich first, the gap between
rich and poor has widened rapidly.
There are interesting moments in the film, which also takes
a brief look at conditions in higher education, the countryside
and the army, but it seems as a whole rather scattered and stretched
thin.
Liew Seng Tats Flower in the Pocket, from Malaysia,
is a slight but mischievous film about two young boys. Their laconic
father (the mother is absent), who works endless hours repairing
mannequins, leaves them more or less on their own. As the films
notes put it, the two brothers grow up with all the freedom
of neglected children. They roam the streets, get into fights
and other trouble in school. Eventually, before its
too late, the father realizes hed better pay some attention.
A number of amusing and lifelike sequences take place along the
way. The director is young as well, born in 1979.
The Greek film, Valse Sentimentale, directed by Constantina
Voulgaris (also born in 1979), is perhaps slight too, but it has
some heart. Its subject is a global phenomenon: youngish people
who have no particular beliefs, ambitions or prospects, but, still,
they have to get by somehow. Stamatis and Electra stumble into
each other in Exarchia, a bohemian Athens neighborhood. Hes
something of an artist, who seems allergic to attachments of any
kind. She seems even less directed in life. They manage to hold
on to each other precariously, at least for the duration of the
film. Voulgaris, the daughter of a well-known Greek filmmaker,
admires the work of Ken Loach and says, according to an article
in the press, that she would like her films to be closer
to realism.
Cochochi, from Mexico, is a sincere but excessively
minimalist work. It also follows two young brothers, who belong
to an indigenous community in the countrys rural northwest.
After their primary school graduation, which one of the brothers
skips (although he has received a scholarship to go on with his
education), the pair are sent on a mission to deliver some medicine
to a distant village. They borrow their grandfathers horse,
which they proceed to lose. They separate to look for him.
Perhaps inspired by Iranian cinema, the first-time co-directors,
Israel Cárdenas and Laura Amelia Guzmán (both born
in 1980), however, do not tamper sufficiently with the events
and characters to engage the spectator deeply. The work threatens
to be mere ethnography, rather than a fully developed artistic
interpretation of life. Clearly, however, a good deal of dedication
and hard work have gone into the filming.
Goutam Ghoses Calcutta, My Love (Kaalbela)
is a more ambitious work. The director attempts to represent the
turbulent years of the early 1970s, when the Naxalite Maoist movement
emerged in West Bengal out of the older Stalinist parties. Ghoses
protagonist, Animesh, is a youth from a middle class rural family
who begins college in Calcutta. He is drawn to art, love and revolutionary
politics.
The 165-minute film, carved out of an original 10-part television
series, follows Animesh through various convolutions, including
his final arrest and incarceration for guerrilla activities. Much
of the material is fascinating, if somewhat sensationalized and
simplified, and the work deals with political debates more seriously
than any American and most European efforts devoted to that period.
However, the directors own attitude toward the history
(and toward the Maoists themselves, where it veers between irony
and uncritical sympathy) is unclear. In his notes, he writes,
In todays hardcore materialistic society, I cherish
the memories of a romantic era ... Only love and compassion remain
bright in our memory, collective or individual, recent or ancient.
Well, that isnt very satisfactory and the somewhat romanticized
version of events tends to confirm the difficulties. Still, a
more systematic viewing and analysis of Calcutta, My Love,
perhaps all four hours of it, would be worthwhile.
The Japanese have been making a great many bad films in recent
years. Glasses, by Naoko Ogigami is unlikely to reverse
that process by itself; the film is too eccentric and slim, but
its a generally pleasant experience. The film is a kind
of Mr. Hulots Holiday (Jacques Tati) in reverse.
A respectable officer worker, Taeko, who wears glasses of course,
arrives at a small resort hotel and is taken aback, at first,
by its singular operations.
The owner is amiable enough, but makes few efforts on his guests
behalf. He tells Taeko to leave her suitcase on the sand, and
she finds it still sitting there some time later. When she arrives,
he is preparing a tempting meal; she assumes it is for her and
the other guests. No such luckhe carries off the meal and
tells her to help herself to the contents of the refrigerator,
which turn out to be one large, dead fish. Shes later informed
cheerfully that there is no sightseeing in the area because there
is nothing to see. Every morning the guests take part in oddball
merci exercises on the beach and spend much of the
rest of the time twilighting (ruminating in the open).
Eventually, Taeko too learns the advantages of non-conformism
... and loses her glasses.
All is Forgiven (Mia Hansen-Love), as noted above, is
a serious effort, but tries too hard to follow the program of
explaining and contextualizing nothing. The story involves a couplehes
a French poet and shes Austriantheir daughter, and
the familys eventual disintegration. Victor takes drugs
and doesnt do much to earn a living. The strain proves too
great and Annette breaks decisively from her husband, taking the
little girl. Years later, the daughter has the opportunity to
meet her father. Then tragedy strikes.
The film is authentic enough, but too little is provided and
the details of the story dont necessarily jibe. Is it impermissible
to ask the director to offer some clues as to the source of Victors
unhappiness? In an interview, Hansen-Love speaks of cutting
to the chase and staying focused on the essential. The category
of the essential includes as well social and psychological causation,
not simply the immediate facts.
Shadows in the Palace is set in Korea some centuries
ago, in a forbidding palace where fierce and inflexible hierarchy
prevails. The death of a court maid leads one of the other women,
a court nurse, to launch an investigation that leads her onto
dangerous and terrifying ground. The film, directed by Kim Meejeung,
takes its work seriously. One assumes that Kim, in depicting brutal
social relations, which threaten to crush the life out of everyone
and where coercion and torture are everyday practices, has contemporary
South Korean life somewhere in her thoughts.
In her notes, she explains that she wanted to bring to
light the stories of neglected and hidden peoples lives
in history. She goes on to note that we too may be
living in a modern day dark palace much like the court
ladies.
Well discuss some of these films in more detail in subsequent
articles.
To be continued
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