Sunday, May 30, 2010

Der Stand der Dinge (1982)

What's the matter with me? I'm watching a Wim Wenders movie - again! The story told about this movie is that Wenders did a film in Hollywood. Lots of things went wrong. The process was interrupted and Wenders went to Portugal, where he found a film crew that had run out of money. Then he made a film, The State of Things, in which Hollywood is bashed. In the beginning of the film, we see a film team in action. They make a B-movie. It turns out there is no more film and no more money either. The crew, stranded in Lisbon, try to occupy themselves. The director goes to L.A. to hunt down the producer, with fatal consequences.
Wenders attempts to show how real life have no stories but how we try to think that we need "stories". Alas - as soon as the film crew is deserted by their producers, the film falls apart, the story starts to wander. The anti-story theme is also explicity elaborated in the dialogue of the film - sometimes not too subtly.  “Stories only exist in stories, whereas life goes by in the course of time without the need to turn out stories”. Errr.
The cinematography, dusty black-and-white, works perfectly to capture the trudging rhytm of the film. But many scenes were far too pretentious (the problem I have with some of Jarmusch's work). However, I must admit that the last 15 minutes, chronicling the re-union of director & producer, were awesome. Here, he builds up some tension and there is also a hint of comedy.
This is not the worst film about movie-making. Wenders might be self-obsessed, but Godard and Fellini are still in a league of their own.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Blonde Venus (1932)

Half through Josef von Sternberg's Blonde Venus, I had high hopes that it would be a film antagonistic to family values. No it wasn't. The ending scenes displayed shiny happy family triangulation. A chemist marries a German cabaret artist (Marlene Dietrich). He gets sick and needs money for medical treatment. His wife performs one more time (a racist number) and ends up selling herself to a rich man. Some of the scenes in the film worked very well: it was nice to watch how Dietrich becomes an outsider to a patriarchal society. But, as I said, in the end, she pays her homage to that same society and everything is well.
This might be a bad movie, but it was messy in a rather entertaining way, and it was interesting to note that almost all characters were unsympathetic.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Les glaneurs et la glaneuse (2000)

Les glaneurs et la glaneuse was certainly a very different film from Cleo from 5 to 9, Agnès Varda's most famous film. I didn't know what to expect. For some reason, I didn't think I were to see a very political, yet simple, documentary about poverty and waste. The film is shot with a digital camera. The visual style of the film is thus very simple. That is no shortcoming. Varda's film could almost be called an essay-documentary, in how it explores its theme by means of association and reliance upon the viewer's own ability of reflection. Varda explores "gleaning"; a variation of activities revolving around picking up stuff discarded by others, be it fruit, vegetables, broken TV:s or food in garbage bins. Varda talks to gleaners and supervisors, shop owners and activists. Varda's voice-over provides the film with structure, at times reflective and interesting, but during some moments too obtrusive, and too self-occupied (a very French motif: towards-death and quasi-phenomenology: "My project is to film with one hand my other hand). The strenght of the film is how soberly it deals with materiality. Varda does not look down on the gleaners, nor does she make any grand claims about "survival" nor "consumerism". She quietly observes day-to-day variations of eating, living and consuming, along with the joys and miseries of rummaging and scavenging.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Herzog x 2: Auch Zwerge haben klein angefangen (1970) & Jeder für sich und Gott gegen alle (1974)

Auch Zwerge haben klein angefangen was, in my opinion, a disappointing movie, even a bad and cynical one. Maybe some consider it subversive. I don't. This was such a crude way to hammer home a point about, I suppose, "stripping down civilization" and "nature's revenge is cruel, cruel, cruel". Early on, we see a chicken feeding on another chicken. Get it? If you want to watch a movie about the indifference of nature - watch Grizzly man instead.
Auch Zwerge... - dwarfs and all - was cluttered with metaphors and allegorical hints. And, so I don't forget to mention it: pointless scenes. The story starts with a prison-like institution in the middle of rebellion. The innates rebel against control, their oppressors and society. The rebellion quickly slides into destruction and brutality.
Actually, I doubt that Herzog himself knew what he was up to when directing this one.  Even the music (something "African") seemed to suggest quite repulsive ideas in combination with the images of "savage people" and "the brutality of nature".

Jeder für sich und Gott gegen alle is also about civilization, but this time we are watching the trite construction of "civilized men". A young man, Kaspar Hauser, turns up at a village square. He cannot speak and he can barely walk. It is evident that he has grown up with very little contact with other human beings. "Civilization", in this film, means everything from cruel freak shows to a professor in logic who uses Hauser as a test to whether logic is something you can grasp without an education (and what logic!). In all these contexts, Hauser remains an outsider, "an artistic mind" that is necessarily out of touch with the expectations and norms of society.  
In some ways, this film is just as speculative as Auch Zwerge.., but it is far more focused, and even those parts that veer towards the ridiculous or the overstated contain enough ambiguity and humor to be interesting - the brainy ending is a case in point. It's a better film. The points made in this film about social morality and weird ideas about what it means to "grow" or to be "natural" (theology and all) are far better developed than the caricatures we are exposed to in Auch Zwerge...

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Mädchen in Uniform (1931)

I had a strong feeling that Goebbels was no fan of Mädchen in Uniform, directed by Leontine Sagan & Carl Froelich. But then it turns out that Goebbels is rumoured to have liked the film "as film". Taking account of what kind of movie we are talking about here, this is very, very strange.
The film, the story of which takes place in a boarding school for girls, oozes social revolution. Manuela has just been sent to the school. Her mother is dead and her father is some kind of military officer. Manuela and the other girls have difficulties in conforming with the expected level of Prussian morality. One reason is the gorgeous von Bernburg, whom all the girls adore. One night, there is a festivity. A group of girls perform a play by Schiller. Afterwards, there is punsch. Manuela shocks the teachers (and thrills the students) with a drunken speech in which she openly professes her love for Bernburg. A series of tragic events irrevocably follow... This is a very good film. Not only is it inventive in how it uses camera movement (which was a fairly new invention) and close-ups, it has also a strong message. Mädchen in Uniorm doesn't hide its agenda: to criticize repressive norms and militaristic ideals. What is even more mind-boggling: this film in no way treats desire among women as wrong or perverse. The point seems rather to be to show what kind of society is created when desire is squashed. The lesbian plot that was very prominent in the stage play version is said to have been toned down a bit in the film. But regardless of this fact, we are not talking about homoerotic subtext here at all. It's all over these images.
As a story about repressive morality & coming-of-age, this is a wonderful film, even a feminist one. The role assigned to the girls by the majority of teachers in the school is very clear: "Soldatentöchter, und wenn Gott will, wieder Soldatenmütter." - This line is uttrered by the school's headmistress, who embodies a repressive system. It's also one of those anti-authoritarian films that have aged well, perhaps because there are many scenes that are very complex in dealing with what it means to act for and against an authoritarian system (in what ways does the Bernburg character change throughout the film?).
The acting - by an all-female cast - is very nice and energetic - and the film has almost no sentimental additions such as sugary music. It's a very simple, matter-of-fact film. 
I suppose this kind of movie was impossible in Germany two years later. Reading about the film, I am surprised to learn that it was commercially successful and that it was distributed in several countries.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Johanna

A pornographic opera about a drug addict-turned-saint? Is there such a film? Yes there is. Kornél Mundruczó made Johanna in 2005. It's one of the weirdest movies I've ever seen. One might assume that this is a positive judgement, but it isn't. I simply couldn't stand to watch one more minute of a film about a young woman at a hospital ward who is considered a saint because she "cures" men by having sex with them. Was there a twist? I don't know, and I don't care. The film started off as an attempt to turn The Kingdom into an opera, but gradually, we ended up in the twisted world of Breaking the waves, without the slightest context. I liked the silvery cinematography, but no, but yes, this was quite unbearable. This is supposed to be an up-dated version of the story about Joan of Arc. Well, if it is, I prefer Bresson or Dreyer or even Luc Besson. Listen to this summary:  "A modern operatic version of the Joan of Arc story, where a young drug addict wakes from a coma with the power to heal the sick by having sex with them." I mean - gosh!

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

The tenant (1976)

I remember what it was like to watch Roman Polanski's The Tenant at the age of 14. I found the movie scary. What I recall most vividly from that viewing experience is the ominous atmosphere of the whole thing. The only images that remained with me were those in which a guy paces around a dark apartment and even that's scary as hell.
A youngish man, Trelkovsky, moves into an apartment whose previous tenant was a girl who committed suicide by hurling herself out from a window. Gradually, Trelkovsky finds his life transforming into hers. He senses that all neighbors are playing some malevolent schemes on him, that the house itself inhabits evil forces. And he gets himself a wig.
The second time around, it's still the atmosphere and style that makes the film; sinister dutch angles of stairs, moody dark colors, Sven Nykvist's cinematography - and lots of weird acting (Polanski himself acts in the leading role). Plenty of scenes that are strange and funny at the same time. In one scene, we see Trelkovsky wandering around in a park. A kid is crying because he has lost his toy boat. What does Trelkovsky do? He slaps the kid. The kid cries some more. 
It's hard to say that The Tenant is "about" anything. If the film has a topic, it is paranoia and some sort of dissolved identity.
I must confess I like this film because Polanski knows how to use simple techniques to evoke Trelkovsky's paranoid world. In plenty of scenes, the viewers sees what Trelkovsky sees. He stands at his window. It's dark outside. We see the toilet across the yard. A man is standing there, motionless. It's scenes like that which give rise to an eerie sense of dizziness, of the world falling apart. Mostly, Polanski is quite successful in doing this. Regrettably, some moments towards the end of the film don't quite match up to the rest - the illusion starts to wear out and the film is transformed into a case-study of psychology instead (plus some of the stuff is too far-out, demons and shit).  
In the end, Polanski makes us uncertain about the identity of lots of the characters. Especially the main ones. There are tons of theories about that, but I am not too sure that makes the film any more interesting ("deep") for me. After all, this film is too trashy to be taken seriously in that way. I don't think there's a set of symbols or hidden meanings here at all. A tooth in the wall is a tooth in a wall, simple as that.
The Tenant is entertaining and wonderfully excessive.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Der Golem (1920)

Der Golem is an engrossing movie primarily because of how it looks: Paul Wegener's film represents color tinted, eerie German expressionism with weird interiors and just as strikingly wonderful outdoor sets. The story builds upon the Jewish legend about the Golem, a clay figure brought to life by means of sorcery and invocation of the secret name. In the film, the Golem is brought to life in order to save Jews from some danger that a rabbi foretells in the constallation of the stars. It turns out that the emperor has decided that the Jews are to leave the ghetto of Prague. But the Golem is not a dependable protector and worker - especially when used for the wrong purpose. What follows is a Frankenstein story about transgressive and dangerous forms of power and creation intermingled with a love story. As I knew very little about the film, it was not clear to me whether the story would have antisemitic traits. I don't think it had many, at least not very clear ones. The expulsion from the ghetto is clearly shown to be unjust. As far as I could tell, the film did not appear to propound any statement about "Jewish character". But on the other hand, what was the meaning of the end of the film, the fade-out image of the David star? And obviously the film did trade on the image of Jews as a group mainly consisting of bearded old men.
As I said, it is the visual style of the film that impressed me the most. The colors contributed to the overall weirdness of the film. The dream-like quality of light in the images was a perfect way to carve out an uncanny living space for the clumsy Golem figure. Plus there were some scenes towards the end that had a strangely comic aspect: a little girl overpowering the Golem by tossing out the amulet that guarantees its life.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Barakat! (2006)

Djamila Sahraoui's film Barakat! might be marred by a number of flaws, but regardless of that, it was a beautiful film about two women with two different perspectives on Algerian history. A doctor finds that her journalist husband is missing. It's the 1990's and Algeria is stricken by civil war. The doctor's friend, who is a nurse, joins her in the quest to find the husband. Barakat! is a brave movie about, among other things, the male gaze. It does not make any essentialist point about "Algerian woman". Instead, it focuses on differences. What I find less satisfying is how the political questions are unraveled. Or is this hunch rather a consequence of my very limited knowledge about Algerian history and political structures?

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Tokyo-Ga (1985)

Tokyo-Ga, Wim Wender's documentary about Tokyo, features some stunning scenes. One of them takes place in a pinball parlor: glaring colors, rattling machies and faces hardened with concentration. In another scene, we follow the manufacturing of the wax food-imitations that are then paraded in restaurant windows. Most scenes are quiet, reduced to a registering camera, while other scenes are connected with the film's mission, told in voice-over by Wenders. He states his admiration for Ozu, the great director of, among other films, Tokyo monogatari. Wenders goes to Tokyo, full aware that Ozu's films are from another time. Japan underwent radical changes and Wenders finds very little that reminds him of the scenery from Ozu's movies. But sometimes he does. In an early scene, we see a little kid and a parent in the metro. The kid refuses to take another step. The parents drags the kid along. A great portion of the film comprises interviews with people who worked with Ozu; a cinematographer, and an elderly actor. It's a shame that these interviews are so short. A shortcoming of Wenders film is that it lacks focus. Why the hell would I be interested in watching a dull conversation with Herzog (in which he delivers a slew of platitudes about civilization) in the Tokyo tower? It's even a bit unclear what exactly it is that fills Wenders with such melancholia. His film attests to a type of romanticism, a longing for some kind of purity and more simple forms of life, that I find a bit too much on the escapist side.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Gazon maudit (1995)

The most interesting fact about the cozily humorous Gazon maudit is that upon its release in the US and A, it was R-rated (in Sweden, 11-year olds could go see the movie). The reason is, obviously, that the story involves love between a pair of women (one of them married, to a man). I have a hard time understanding what made the American censors think that this is a film that corrupts the minds of the young. It's a film about relationship constallations, sexism and also, different standards in the way male and female infidelity are seen. It's not a particularly good movie, though. There's a lot of shouting and door-slamming, but at least the film is not obviously sexist.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Arven (1979)

The setting of Arven, a Norwegian film directed by Anja Breien, might not be very original; rich familly member dies and old quarrels and difficulties come back to haunt the rest of the family. But Arven turned out to be a good movie, even a funny one, granted you are not a stranger to black humor. Kai Skaug was a successful owner of a shipping company. He leaves a big inheritance for his family to fight over. This does not sound like a very nice story, but Breien creates a full-blown neurotic family tragedy about greediness and contempt, against the background of a very subdued Schubert piece. Anita Björk as the resentful matron Märta is simply magnificent. So are the rest of the actors. Breien has a good ear for pitch; how people talk, how people keep silent.
Arven revolves around small-mindedness and petty secrets. But it is also a film about stuff. Skaug Sr. lived in a house that was almost a chateau. His relatives quarrel about his belongings. Breien ironically focuses on furniture, bric-a-brac, carpets, art - to introduce us to the tensions within a family. In one priceless scene, we see two women fight over an ugly pillow. They both grasp the pillow, exclaiming, "It is mine!" It is almost as if these things (and, god, the money!) consitute the only reason why family members communicate with each other at all.
What makes Arven such a delightful movie is the close attention it pays to facial expressions. The story is not limited to the dialogue; it is inscribed in the character's faces; grumpy, alarmed, aloof, worried, haggard.
You can watch the film here.

The quiet American (2002)

The quiet American, directed by Phillip Noyce (based on a novel by Graham Greene) is one of the films I found more tolerable upon second watching. This is by no means a great film, but it makes some interesting points about colonialism and the events and power nexuses leading up to the Vietnam war. The problem is perhaps that the political aspect becomes little more than an element in a thriller (I should read the novel: I like Greene). Some of the scenes chronicling the political attitudes of the "American", Alden Pyle, a humanitarian aid worker, were awfully non-subtle (the American promenades into a post-explosion scene and what does he do? He calmly wipes blood off his pants. This moment, and another one, where we see him talk Vietnamese (which he is supposed not to know) gives us clues to see that he is not the person he pretends to be. OK, I get it. The most interesting aspect of The quiet American as a political movie is Pyle as a character; ignorant, "idealistic", with shady intentions that are perhaps not clear even to himself.

The film's attempt at love story is one hell of a mess - I am unclear as to whether this is good or bad. But there is a political aspect of the film's portrayal of a romantic triangle. The quiet American seems to allude to the image of the Oriental woman: obedient but cunning, aloof, a beautiful secret. The woman in the film, Phuong, is depicted almost as a possession, over the right to which two men, a British reporter and the American humanitarian aid worker, fight. But there are also moments when this picture is smashed, whe Phuong is presented as a real person, not just a projection of two men's desire. I suppose these two men's "desire" (for what?) is discussed critically in the film, but there are, I think, relapses into conventional and sexist film language (depicting sex, for example, and the way the camera zooms in on Phuong's body).The question is: is the ambiguity that surrounds Phuong's role in these men's life intentional (that we are supposed to see variations of power: colonial, gendered, economic) or is it an instance of blurry thinking? I don't know, but I opt for the first.

There is little to be found in terms of inventiveness in The quiet American. For the most part, it's a film that follows the rule-book (how love is depicted, how violence is depicted, the structure of the film, etc.).The rule-book showcases plenty of examples of sepia-toned cinamatography and elegiac atmospheres.
But, on the other hand, Michael Caine & Brendan Fraser are rather good in this.

Taking sides (2001)

István Szabó's Taking sides is what most would call a chamber drama. The number of characters are reduced to a minimum and most scenes take place in one room. Despite several moments of bad acting (most of them Havey Keitel's interpretation of an obnoxious, aggressive American) and despite the poorly written dialogue ("I am an artist and I believe in art"), Taking sides deals with quite interesting questions concerning art, responsibility and what it is to say that one "does not engage in politics". The film revolves around Steve Arnold, an American army major, who investigates the case of conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler. Unlike some other musicians, Furtwängler didn't flee Germany. Rather, his career seemed to have been supported by the Nazi élite. When interrogated about his collaboration with the Party, Furtwängler downplays his political responsibility. He does this by appealing to a separation of art and politics. Arnold shows no understanding for Furtwängler's attempt to absolve himself from responsibility; his interrogation style oscillates between earnest questions and outright abuse. (Does Arnold have an agenda? That remains unclear.) One of the points Arnold makes is that sometimes you are involved in politics, whether you want to or not.
The film is not pretending to solve the question about responsibility. Instead, it poses some questions and holds up the kinds of answers people have to these questions. What form these answers take express something about how a specific person understands herself (and what we, as viewers, are inclined to think). Is Furtwängler a naive person? What does it mean to call him "naive"?
A flaw of the film is, however, that it doesn't go far enough, but it lets its character slip into the conventional caricature trap.

(PS: Istan Szabo has made one of the worst films in the history of cinema, Sunshine. It was a good thing that I didn't know this while I sat down to watch Taking sides.)