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Masters not quite masterly
The recent Cannes International Film Festival had an excellent
line up of names, but not many of them seemed to be in form.
However, while a few discoveries were made, some of the old guard
did manage to throw in refreshing pieces of celluloid, writes
GAUTAMAN BHASKARAN.
THIS summer's Cannes International Film Festival had a brilliant
line-up of auteurs. Names like Jean-Luc Godard, Shohei Imamura,
Nanni Moretti, Abbas Kiarostami, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Manoel de
Oliveira, Hou Hsiao-Hsien, Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford
Coppola spelt magic and excitement, but the works of some were
disappointing.
Godard, for instance, whose "Eulogy of Love", failed to ignite
the spark which once set aflame the French New Wave. His is a
vague love story, which bundles together personal musings and
overtly critical swipes at other directors. At the end of the
movie, one is left feeling that it is but the ranting of a man in
his twilight years.
Hou's "Millennium Mambo" is no patch on his earlier "Flowers of
Shanghai". Tracing the life of Vicky, who is torn between two
men, Hou takes us this time into the world of crime, deception
and jealousy as he captures the sleaze of Taipei's night clubs
and techno bars. As one critic said, "the only thing common about
the two films is that the characters in both spend much of their
time stoned out of their skulls". In "Shanghai", it was opium and
alcohol, and in "Mambo" it is chemical temptation of every
conceivable kind.
And, goodness gracious, what has gone wrong with Kiarostami,
whose "ABC Africa" looks at AIDS with little feeling or
sensitivity? Is this the man who gave us such classics as "Where
is My Friend's Home", "Through the Olive Tress" and "Taste of
Cherry"? "ABC Africa" (essentially a documentary, though the
festival did not term it so), made at the behest of the United
Nations Fund for Agricultural Development, captures the faces of
thousands of Ugandan children orphaned by the scourge. Somehow,
this effort seems so half hearted and heartless (most cruel I
would say, when one notices the way a nurse is shown packing the
body of an infant), that I wonder whether the Iranian auteur was
forced into it.
Finally, Michael Haneke - who drove viewers out of the auditorium
with his earlier "Funny Games", a psychologically gut wrenching
murder drama - takes sexual repression to the creepy crevices of
depravity in his latest offering. Isabelle Huppert is "The Piano
Teacher", whose depressing existence in a cooped-up flat with a
domineering mother pushes her not just to watch peep shows and
copulating couples in cars, but also to set freaky terms for a
relationship with a student. Haneke is not happy about stopping
at this: Huppert sniffing at used tissues and gynaecologically
mutilating herself are scenes nauseating enough to have been
edited out.
But Liv Ullmann's jury thought it fit to honour "The Piano
Teacher" with the Grand Prize, the second most coveted trophy at
Cannes after the Golden Palm. Huppert got a well deserved Best
Actress pat, and her student, Benoit Magimel, a not-so-well-
deserved Best Actor award.
What was undoubtedly worthy of the jury's recognition was Nanni
Moretti's "The Son's Room" from Italy. It won the Golden Palm.
The Italian director, who also acts in his movies, gives us,
perhaps for the first time, a work least personal. An important
step forward for Moretti after the static self-parody of his
recent creations - "Dear Diary" and "April" - "The Son's Room" is
finely tuned, with not an emotion out of place. Superbly acted by
the entire cast, the movie steps away from Moretti's customary
narcissism and trademark passions like social and political
concerns. "The Son's Room" reflects a new maturity of a director
who paints the tale of pain and grief with rare dignity. Even
when the camera lingers long on the funeral/coffin scene, Moretti
gets his frames into a perfect rhythm, where I could not find
anything amiss, where I could not feel a single exaggerated
emotion or expression.
So much so for the tightness of the script and the strength of
the maker, who does not let himself be swayed away by a story
which has all the ingredients to push your heart over your head.
Moretti's alter ego in "The Son's Room" is a psychiatrist, who
does not allow the woe-filled world of his patients to intrude
his little home of joy, no not until that fateful Sunday.
Planning to go running with his teenage son, Moretti is urgently
called away by one of his patients. The boy goes out diving
instead and drowns.
Guilt and sorrow grip him, his wife and their daughter. Although
he is constantly assured by the rest that the son would have gone
out to sea in any case, running or no running, the tragedy
becomes so obsessive and its image so hauntingly powerful in
Moretti's mind that they drive a wedge between him and the
family. An important scene where the girl becomes aggressive
during a school basketball match sums up the tension with
extraordinary precision. However, the boy's girlfriend ultimately
helps and soothes the family to get over its angst, and the final
shots reveal a certain tranquillity, a certain poignancy that can
only flow out of an exceptionally disciplined mind. Moretti's is,
and more.
Another film that was as interesting is Danis Tanovic's "No Man's
Land". A cracking political satire which captures the futility of
war, this work is the culmination of Tanovic's years of
documenting the Bosnian conflict. It is in fact the microcosm of
the 1993 war in former Yugoslavia that is sometimes ironic,
sometimes dramatic, but almost always humourous.
A Bosnian and a Serb soldier are trapped between enemy lines, and
apart from the predicament of reaching their respective zones
safely from the no-man's land, they also have to deal with the
mine strapped body of a colleague.
Enter television reporters and the United Nations, and what we
have is a collage of colour and wit that seems to underline the
folly of such conflicts in a work whose sparse canvas and
engrossing screenplay (it won a prize for this) add to the
content and form of "No Man's Land".
Tanovic is a Bosnian, but what comes out strongly in the picture
is its anti-war message. And from a first-time director, this was
just splendid.
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