AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS PRINT ARCHIVE 2000 |
OF GOLDEN LIONS – VENICE 2000 THE 57TH by
Harlan Kennedy
Amazing
changes. In the 100 days between The pair of French
films that fought back by dominating the 57th
Mostra's
first week only bore out, ironically, the Barbera
ethos: ars brevis, vita longa; life is long, art should embrace
concision. In Raúl
Ruiz’s Fils De Deux Mères ou Comédie
De L’innocence and Claude Chabrol’s
Merci Pour Le Chocolat
– two guerrilla delights – veteran storytellers revel in mythic miniaturism. Each movie is a compact thriller set amid
the more-or-less beastly bourgeois.
Each stars Isabelle Huppert as a troubled mother. Each anatomises
the love-hate structures of family life. Ruiz, the
Paris-based Chilean, invokes magical realism from the start. The visual loose change of the credits
sequence – shot in fuzzily saturated colour as if
for a home video – is accompanied by a little boy’s voice itemising
each group of objects we see: Seashells, ashtrays, flower, alarm clocks…” (almost the classic repertory of Surrealism). These few seconds brief us on the boy, his
otherworldly mind and his birthday-given camera which will become a key to
the central mystery. Why does he tell
his mother (Huppert) one day she’s no longer his mother and take her to an
address containing a beautiful violin teacher (Jeanne Balibar,
face of a Picasso muse) who lost her own son two years before and now treats
Huppert’s boy as if he were her own? It is a fantasy
wrapped in an enigma encased in an anxiety-stricken APB: All Parents
Bulletin. What if your child inexplicably disowned you? Huppert enacts the disorientation
hypnotically, mask-face intensifying to a new pitch of deceptive impassivity,
gestures like brief, stricken flowers of panic. (She is still the greatest
screen actress alive, doing the absolute most with the absolute least). What follows is an ‘explanation’ that is no
explanation, and later a ‘solution’
that is no solution: not for the vagaries
of child-mother love, nor for the holes that open up in reality, for the
susceptible, from day to day or hour to hour. Ruiz last dazzled us
by conquering Proust (Time Regained). His runic
earlier films loved by some (Hypothesis
Of The Stolen Painting, Three Crowns Of The Sailor) now seem less
satisfying than these collisions between a knowable text – here a novel by
Massimo Bontempelli – and a style in love with the
unknowable. In a Dadaist motif the
army of white sculpture-busts in a room in Huppert’s home all turn,
overnight, in a new direction, to gaze in unison at the freshly-hung
engraving of the ‘Judgment of Solomon”: itself symbolic since it limns
another tale of mothers warring over a child.
Elsewhere Ruiz’s flair for moments of eyeblink-
or earblink – alarm is almost Hithcockian: like the faint sound, unsourced
and near-subliminal, of human cries under a shot of the child’s camera
rearing periscope-like above the dinner table, or the variations, choric and
haunting, on images of running water. Chabrol,
a surface realist, would never be caught with hand in the Surrealists’
till. But what could be more
irrational than Huppert’s conduct in MERCI POUR LE CHOCOLAT? This housewife, mother and bourgeois
fashion plate – as in Ruiz’s film she wears colour-coordinated
Huppert, a woman
with every advantage, would swap them all for a killer’s advantage of supreme
power. No other motivation is
volunteered unless you listen closely.
The film is about – Chabrol’s words –
‘perversity’ and ‘solipsism’: the loneliness of the long-distance monomaniac,
whether musician or murderer. Stylistically the film has a Dreyer-esque austerity, recalling that glacial proscenium
masterpiece GERTRUD. Impeccable deeds
unfold amid impeccable furniture with, of course, impeccable food. Until you get to the hot chocolate. Even then, suggests Chabrol,
in French haut-bourgeois society no one can hear you scream. Social dysfunction,
subtle or slapstick, was the semi-visible webbing
connecting many Beckett is about
social breakdown? Is funny? Yes and yes. This stage-to-screen project supported by
British TV’s Channel 4 proves it. A
dozen Samworks were on show in Venice, from full
plays to 10-minute playlets, each with a
different, prestige director, ranging
from Anthony Minghella (Play) and Sir Richard Eyre (Rockaby) to that Mamet again (Catastrophe,
starring fellow scribe Harold Pinter and a mute, valedictory Sir John Gielgud as a human statue). The world has now
recovered from modernism, helped by years of wearing those hardhats labeled
Postmodernism. No longer afraid of
mental concussion we warm to the Irishman’s humour
and allusive obliquity. Fly intertextualisings flavour the
bleak mantras with echoes of Joyce Proust,
Shakespeare. And Beckett’s portraits,
we realise, are of foibled
human interaction, not just dead-end loneliness. Endgame,
filmed by British playwright Conor McPherson in a
set lyrical with timor mortis (Rothko bands of blurry colour round four dingy walls) is about the mad love
between a master and servant: Michael Gambon’s genteelly raving Hamm and David Thewlis’s gawky, touching Clov. Patricia Rozema’s
Happy Days, with Rosaline Linehans’s Winnie buried in a real sand-dune, conceal an
imbroglio of relationships in its singsong memory-babble. In Krapp’s Last Tape
– one man and a recording machine, filmed by Atom Egoyan
in a half-light with a spiky-haired John Hurt conjuring the ghost of Beckett
himself – picks its way through the debris of a feeling past and felt, lost
passions…. Beckett seems dated
only by his determinism. He can seem
dictatorial in his prescriptions for hope-beneath-the-nothingness, at least next to
some manifestations of a newer, more serendipitous modernism. The fresh-dawn movies at Actually all three
pix have subtly wrought structures.
Iran’s The Circle , Golden Lion winner as Best
Film, does a La Ronde
with its portmanteau picture of persecuted women in the patriarchal new There are three
discernible acts in the 3-hour Platform,
which starts with multi-character small-town scenes, irises in to a group of
youngsters who form a touring rock band, then (post-tour) returns to the ebb,
flow and social vicissitude of life in the town. Jia
re-uses Wang Hongwei, the bespectacled hangdog
youth from his slice-of-life debut Xiao
Wu, but even he is scarcely central.
The protagonist of the new Chinese cinema is Everyone. He/she/they are at once form
and content in a large and dwarfing world. Sometimes they vanish into it, as
in a wondrously staged boy-girl chat where each of the two to-ing, fro-ing characters takes
turns casually to disappear from our view, while still talking, behind a bit
of Great Wall. (Here endeth the omniscient P-o-V of
the spectator). In another scene the
desert-stranded rock-group youngsters race uphill to hail a train passing
over a giant viaduct. Smaller than
ants they seem enlarged – exalted – by the joy of being lost in the
wilderness. A nearly identical scene
occurs in LIULIAN PIAO PIAO, another film with an
ever shifting center of gravity. A
slim-plotted first half in Hong Kong – jostling scenes of immigrant life
among work-permit Mainlanders, from a family selling hot food on a sidewalk
to a girl making ends meet, in every forlorn sense, as a prostitute – yields
to an Act Two in the snowy north. The
girl returns to find her folks, her friends, herself. In a loosely edited, casually framed,
scrapbook-style film, helmer Fruit Chan’s only
concession to traditional cogency is to feature a unifying symbol: the
‘durian’. This spiky watermelon-sized,
coconut-hard fruit – available in all good So did much at Shooting on digital
video – now acceptable to all filmfests – the
ex-Rohmer producer turned auteur (Maitresse, Reversal
Of Fortune) adapts a quasi-autobiographical novel by This critic’s Golden
Kennedy, however, awarded irregularly to eccentric Italian allegorical
comedies, goes to Gabriele Salvatores’ Denti (Teeth). The Mediterraneo Oscar-winner cranks up his style to a punk
Expressionism for this drolly excruciating account of dental trouble – the
hero is a snaggle-toothed Woody Allenish
neurotic played by Sergio Rubino - which also hints
at the layers of a larger, Dantesque paranoia you
can find in every dentist’s office.
Hell is other people, burrowing at your nerve-ends. Denti
is also a fable about Catholicism, its agonies, awful warnings, root-canal
moral fundamentalism. In this light are not dentists (or priests) as much to
be pitied as the patients (or flock)?
“Be gentle with him” says the nurse to Rubino
before he is ushered into the maddest fiend of all, a bearded Torquemada with singsong voice, played by veteran Italian
ham Paolo Villaggio. Salatores’ camera
spares no character and no filmgoer. It runs, jumps, writhes, and when
possible peers into or out of mouths, giant teeth like portcullises. Suggestion for foreign distribution:
double-bill it with this year’s 25th anniversary reissue of Jaws. My trusty gondola
‘Orca’ reserved, I look forward to next year’s festival. CIAO
VENEZIA. COURTESY T.P.
MOVIE NEWS THIS ARTICLE APPEARED IN THE NOV-DEC 2000 ISSUE OF FILM COMMENT. ©HARLAN KENNEDY. All rights reserved. |
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