AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS PRINT
ARCHIVE 1986
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BERLIN FILM FESTIVAL – 1986 BOMBS IN BERLIN by Harlan Kennedy Stink bombs in the festival cinema! New unearthing
of German atrocities on film! Journalist manhandled and interrogated by riot
police! Six-inch snowdrifts and arctic winds choking the city! Yes, it was business
as usual at the 36th Berlin FilmFestspiele.
Here in Europe's capital of culture shock, where confronta-tions and crises –
political, artistic, meteorological – meet in an eternal apocalypse, the
snow had hardly re-formed over the footprints of Anatoly Shcharansky
on the Glienicke Bridge before Berliners had
a fresh cause célèbre in their midst. The cause was Reinhard Hauffs Stammheim: The Trial. This West German
movie re-enacts the 196-day trial of the Baader-Meinhof
gang in 1975. Not recognizing the legitimacy of the West German state, they
of course did not acknowledge the authority of its court. All five main
defendants died (at various stages) in prison: one by hunger strike before
the Stammheim trial, one during, and three after.
All, according to official accounts, by suicide. Adopted ever since as
an emblem for heroism by the radical Left, the Red Army Faction (as they
styled themselves) has now reached the immortality of celluloid. The
artistic quality of Hauffs film is pretty awful:
hectoring, ham performances, failure to elucidate the historical context, a
confusing structure that shimmies between dramatized trial transcription and
"imaginary" re-creations of the group's cell life. But around this
mouse of a film a mountain of controversy has grown up. A Hamburg première was
postponed due to protests and threatened demonstrations. In Berlin a stink
bomb was let off in the auditorium before the screening (afterward would have
been understandable); riot police combed the cinema for real bombs, and
police vans ringed the building during the showing. Later, there was a tussle
involving a journalist who had taken a picture of a cop. She was dragged down
to the basement; it's against the law, we're told, to take pictures of anyone
(!) in Germany without his or her permission. The arrival of festival director
Moritz De Hadeln,
brandishing stern diplomacy, sprang the reporter, and the "cop
shot" was published next day in the FilmFest
Journal. Inevitably, these
incidents gave the Right fresh ammunition to fire at the communist left, and
the Left fresh excuses to witter on about the spread of
state authoritarianism. Even with the nearby example of feudal despotism on
the other side of the Berlin Wall, there is no restraining the knee-jerk
radical response in Deutschland. And the country's
moviemakers can be as knee-jerk as anyone. The pity of Stammheim is that eluding it was the chance to bring to life the
true character of terrorism and its emotional base: that "cold
passion" (in Mikhail Bakunin's words) that
puts ideologies before human lives, including the terrorists' own. No wonder
the jury that awarded Stammheim the Golden Bear was
split six to five. Jury president Gina
Lollobrigida made
it clear that she was one of the five. Her reason: "This film can only
encourage terrorism at a time when the world is suffering increasingly from
this disease," An East German friend
detested the movie on different grounds. In his reading, director Hauff and
writer Stefan Aust imply, by the
relationships depicted in the cell scenes, that Andreas
Baader prompted or perpetrated the death of Ulrike Meinhof, though the official
version was "suicide" The film also suggests to my angry friend
that the simultaneous deaths of the three last-surviving revolutionaries were
not (as popularly supposed by the Left) state murder in response to the
hijacking and hostage incidents designed to free them, but were, as in the
official version, suicide. My friend is, I think
very wrong. The trouble with Hauffs film lies in other
directions. The movie would be negligible were it not also negligent (or
disingenuous) with the facts it selects and the way it presents them. It
concusses us with modish clichés of anti-authoritarian alarmism – the biased
judge, the conniving press, the quasi-paramilitary police – and leaves the
actions and animus of terrorism itself not only unaccused
but unexamined. Half-baked political
cinema was not confined in Berlin to Stammheim.
As
the early days of the Main Competition ground on, it sometimes seemed as if
any movie was kosher for that event if it depicted the struggle against
tyranny, whatever the time, place, or frailty of dramatic incident. So we had Ingemo Engström's long, wordy,
and anemic Flucht In Der Norden (The Flight North), with its Thirties
German heroine (Katharina Thalbach) wavering between
romance in Finland and the call of anti-fascism; Wolfram Paulus' glacially
dull Heidenlöcher (Hide-Outs),
about
a Nazi deserter holing up in the wintry countryside, where there's little
food, less warmth, and almost no conversation; George Panassopoulos'
crackpot Mania (Mania)
from Greece, in which a career woman throws off the bourgeois yoke
by going all Bacchic in a public garden; and Miklos Jancso's tail-chasing L'Aube (The Dawn), with Sabras fighting
the Brits in Forties Palestine and arcane dialogue matching Jancso's eternal circles of actors and camera movement. Berlin has become a
soft touch for any movie that wags a finger against ruling classes, creeds,
or dogmas. The best competition films were those that set about the
finger-wagging most individually and poetically. Don't be deterred by the
title of Masahiro Shinoda's Yari
No Gonza (Gonza the Spearsman), which sounds like The
Muppet Show gone samurai. The film is a parable of the old order yielding
to the new, set in a visually dazzling 17th-century Japan: lamp-lit, golden
interiors whose geometry is lyricized by the swirl
of multicolored robes and kimonos. We are poised between the dying fall of
samurai martial traditions and the emergence of the tea ceremony as the
centerpiece of Japanese honor. This tea ceremony and
its runic secrets, which prove the undoing of the adultery-accused hero and
heroine caught poring over the scrolls, will prove a puzzle to Westerners. It
takes a while to appreciate that what seems like a mad obsession with gustatory
trivia (What if you prefer coffee? Are tea bags allowed?) was in this shogunate a symbol of samurai self-discipline, social
delicacy, and dynastic solidarity. Shinoda, whose Double
Suicide also infused domestic minutiae in the boiling water of tragedy,
turns the screen into a bubbling pot of conspiracy and hieratic passion. The
ending especially – with blood, horror, and showdown on a triple-humped
wooden bridge – is as devastating as anything from the Japanese since Yojimbo. The other competition
triumph was Nanni Moretti's
La Messa E Finita (The Mass Has Ended), which won a Silver
Bear. Signor Moretti is a ta11 and melancholy Italian comic
who resembles a good-looking gondola pole. Here he plays a young priest
transferred from a remote island to a parish in the Roman outskirts where he
was born and brought up. Now don't all run away
screaming at the word "priest; thinking of Bing
Crosby
or Fernandel, or flock into church either. This
cinematic Mass here is funny, unpredictable, and tousle-rhythmed. Moretti's great skill as a
performer is in alternating scenes of doggy passivity with berserk tantrums
in which he beats his fists against the whole world. This man's rock is
faceted by his abortion-prone sister, his dad who has decamped with a young girl
leaving mom in the lurch, and a former school friend and ex-radical who has
now curled up into an Oblomov-like coma. "I am at
home; says his answering machine, "but I don't feel like talking to
anyone anymore" Catholicism becomes comically human, trying to pick its
way between the yapping dictates of dogma and the anguishes of private
emotion. Berlin began on a grace
note with Federico Fellini's Ginger e Fred (Ginger and Fred), the
gala opening pic, shown out of
competition. Saint Federico – his-more-than-mortal talent surely now deserves
official canonization – has us all join him on cloud nine (8½-plus) in this
glorious, funny, sentimental vaudeville. Marcello Mastroianni and Giulietta Masina, ex-hoofers reteaming for an Ed Sullivan-like variety telethon 25
years after they split up, ride high through the stations of Fellini's wonderland. Ah,
and
the stations of the lost and found: a luxury hotel with magical studio
landscape out back where the artistes gather – dwarves, transsexuals, Kojack and
Woody Allen look-alikes; the television studio where monitors disgorge a
Rabelaisian stream of pasta commercials; and the stage where Mastroianni and Masina
finally
re-create a moment of love for each other and a second-rate career that at
least had integrity – give or take the odd pratfall and power cut. Gloriously funny, very
touching, and carelessly profound, the film works to stir one's feelings for
both Mastroianni and Masina,
as
well as their failed characters. "Why look for miracles?" says a
levitating monk who refuses to levitate for the Tv
cameras.
"The miraculous is all around us." Notions that Italy was
becoming the flavor of the festival were reinforced by the arrival of Britisher Derek Jarman's Caravaggio.
The 17th-century brush-wielder, part-time criminal, murderer, and
homosexual seems like perfect material for a roaring counter-Hollywood
biopic. Instead of Charltonhestono hanging upside
down by his smock-tails from the Sistine ceiling, we have this Mediterranean
madman dragging pimps, prostitutes, and rent boys off the streets and
transforming them into John the Baptist, Mary Magdalen,
or
Christ himself. But dear, oh dear,
what does Jarman do? He goes all deconstructionist
on us. The film is told in a series of disjointed, time-chopping tableaux,
many of them loosely built around a Famous Painting, in which credibility and
continuity are butchered to make a Brechtian
holiday.
The use of anachronisms (bicycle, pocket calculator, etc.) to
impart life and wit to a period setting is promising. But the gimmickry If Caravaggio shows
the British avantgarde at low ebb, the Berlin
festival annually poses the question "Where have all the German wunderkinder gone?" Was it only ten
years ago that the city's projection rooms fizzed and exploded with Fassbinder, Herzog, and Wenders?
Alas,
the German New Wave is no longer waving but drowning. Who would have thought
that the most "modern" new German film at Berlin in 1986 would
be, faute de mieux, one by the oldest New German of them
all, Alexander Kluge? His Der Angriff Der Gegenwart Auf Die Ubrige Zeit
(The Blind Director) is a film essay, using
a typical cut-and-paste combination of fiction and nonfiction. Bits of opera (Tosca) jostle with gobbets of
learning (art, history, politics) and stretches of invented narrative (the
adventures of an orphaned girl shuttled between foster parents). Theme? A
warning against the spiritual tunnel vision of humanity today, its eyes
focused on pragmatism, political and personal, and missing the panoramic
lessons of the past. Treatment? Eclectic, darting, witty, and invigorating. Though few other
serious German films made an impact this year, there was a notable fight for
best comedy between Doris Dorrie's Männer (Men), a merry trifle about a
betrayed husband shacking up incognito with his wife's lover, and the
extraordinary Otto – The Film. Otto is the biggest
money-maker among West German movies since the war. Co-directed by Otto Waalkes and Xavier Schwarzenberger (Fassbinder's
cameraman on Lili Marleen and Lola), it stars the
wild-haired, stark-eyed Herr Waalkes as a
catastrophe-prone Candide in a film that
resembles Hellzapoppin' out of Airplane. The succession of
top-rate gags, pegged out on the flimsiest clothesline of a plot (Waalkes has to win a girl and find 8,760 deutschmarks and
50 pfennings to repay a brutal, satanesque moneylender), includes mad rabbits, exploding
restaurants, Humphrey Bogart impersonations, and
plenty else. To those pleading an aversion to German comedy, please try this
one. It's probably the best conversion therapy since Ernst Lubitsch. A Berlin under a
half-foot of snow and cheek-smack winds made slogging into the outer regions
of the festival even more formidable than usual. To make it to the
Retrospective or the Young Film-Makers Forum you needed goggles and a St.
Bernard dog-cum-brandy keg. Some critics never made it at all. A cry of
"Which way to the Fred Zinnemann retrospective?"
was the last that would be heard before a fur-capped head disappeared
beneath a giant seven-inch snowdrift. (So all right, he was a short critic
from a small newspaper.) As for the Forum –
held in the Outer Reaches and affectionately dubbed Ice Station Dziga in honor of Forum hero Dziga
Vertov – surprises were in store. Impostors stalked
both it and the main festival, posturing as representing FILM COMMENT. They
didn't and still they swilled at the trough of festival hospitality,
plundering canapés and guzzling booze at parties, lunches, etc. One
had actually been invited as a "friend of the Forum" (What the hell
is that?) "We don't care about FILM COMMENT," forum director Ulrich Gregor told me. Well, you can't argue with that. Fresh from the shock
of finding the first phantom double "representing this magazine, I then
stumbled on two more. To wit, one Richard Traubner
and one Ulrich Schmid. These reinforcement spooks rose up and
hammered on the festival's doors, waving their press clips and request for
accreditation. (In Herr Schmid's case, faked onto a
photocopy of FILM COMMENT letterhead paper.) Still, it gave me time to read
four good books, to watch the German dubbing problems of Der Denver
Clan (Dynasty), and to catch up on the
new American films. James Foley's
family-of-thieves pic, At Close Range, was the feisty competition entry from the U.S., firing at
us pointblank Sean Penn, Christopher Walken,
and
the most hyped-up funky expressionist cinematography since. . . well, since
Foley's last film, Reckless. And in the forum the star turn was Ross McElwee's Sherman's March, which caused raptures of delight with its dryly funny
diary of a hero-filmmaker slogging it along the historic path of Confederacy
defeat, while losing his own battles with love (unrequited), money (running
out), and control of the movies structure (escaping like psycho-strands of
spaghetti into subplots, digressions, and a 160-minute running time). Also, a cheer, please,
for Louis Malles feature documentary, Gods
Country. Louis visits the small Minnesota farming town of Glencoe in two
trips separated by six years. "'Ere I was in Glencoe, he says the first
time round, "'aveeng a good time with the townsfolks." So do we. There are the redneck farmers
cussin' the weather, Steve the cow inseminator cussin' the cow, and the banker's wife, who writes plays
with titles like Much Ado About Corn, cussin' her sparse
attendance. `But if it's a large cast, we get a big audience; she adds. Six years later we are
back in Glencoe and they are all cussin' again, in
deafening unison, only about Reagan and Reaganomics. Malles film, looking at the political macro-picture
through the social miniature, is a gem; it wins my personal best documentary
prize. Prize for the most rivetingly disconcerting new trend in subject matter
must go to two West German AIDS movies.
Rosa Von Praunheim's Ein Virus
Kennt Keine Moral (A Virus Knows No Morality) stars the fearless Rosa himself
(yes, himself) as
a gay Berlin sauna owner who contracts the dreaded ailment. As suppresser
cells multiply, the screen fills up with gallows gags, songsters in drag, high-camp
hospitals, and the general air of a Lana
Turner
melodrama choreographed by John Waters. Though the mixture is bludgeoning, at
least Von Praunheim goes straight for his
subject. Hans Noever's AIDS – Love in Danger merely
tacks the AIDS terror,
like a catchpenny afterthought, onto a banal little thriller plot of drugs
and racketeering. God help us all if AIDS
is about to become a worldwide movie flavor-enhancer to help pep
up dull scenarios. Kudos for the top male
achiever at this year's Berlinale must go to fest chief
Moritz De Hadeln. With a
courteous smile and a large spanner, he has tightened efficiency in all areas
of the festival. The prize for top female achiever must go to La Lollobrigida, who as jury president looked like a million bucks (allowing
for inflation), smiled for the cameras, and even managed to keep jury member
Lindsay Anderson in order. That she also fought
to keep Stammheim and the Golden Bear
apart showed wisdom and tenacity beyond the call of jury duty. Finally, those
KO'd by the clinkers in the competition could find smelling salts in three
fest-stealing films by a Taiwanese director. Hou
Hsiao
Hsien's name sounds like a cat fight, and he makes
films to match: vivid, pugnacious, neorealist
essays
in which street life, teenage agonies, poverty, comedy, and romance are all
rhymed in a helter-skelter social pantheism. Summer At Grandpas has
already won praise and prizes (Edinburgh, London, Nantes); The
Time to Live and the lime to Die grabbed much glory at Berlin, all epic,
semi-autobiographical 155 minutes of it. But the fizziest film
is The Boys from Fengkuei, which won top prize at Locarno (formerly
run by none other than – wait for it – Moritz De Hadeln).
Had Boys been eligible for competition at Berlin, it would have
knocked every other prize contender down for the count. It is a bubbling
tragicomedy in which the old cliché of the youngster going to live in the big
city (Taipei) is carbonated by a volatile camera, tough characterization, and
funny-satiric human observation; viz.,
of
how kids communicate more by hitting each other than by talking. Sometimes people at
film festivals feel like doing the same. COURTESY T.P. MOVIE NEWS. THIS ARTICLE APPEARED
IN THE JUNE 1986 ISSUE OF FILM
COMMENT. ©HARLAN
KENNEDY. All rights reserved. |
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