Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Äta sova dö (2012)

Gabriela Pichler's first film, Äta sova dö, is immensely impressive. It's an important film and as a film it is very tight, very simple and uses a loose tableaux technique perfectly, with no ambition of creating a Great Narrative. The main characters are Raša and her father. She works at a factory where salad is packed into plastic boxes. But the economic crisis has hit Sweden and there will be layoffs. Raša is made redundant even though she does her utmost to keep the job: why do they fire her when they know that she is an efficient worker? The union is powerless and the union representative is made redundant himself. Pichler's depiction of Raša and her father, their common struggler for subsistence, reminds me of the Dardenne brothers - in the same spirit as the brothers, Pichler has made a movie that is both minimalist and deeply engaging; a film that opens your eyes and makes you think, feel, react, look. It's the kind of movie in which every small little detail matters, everything is a matter of life and death.

When you what Äta sova dö you get the sense that these scenes are partly improvisations. Pichler has a good ear for how people speak, how they act when nothing much is going on but when there is still lots of tension in the air. In several scenes, Raša and other villagers attend a course offered by the unemployment office. Pichler focuses on the dreary faces around the table, how they are forced to listen to a woman who doesn't believe in her own words, but who in a seemingly well-meaning way tries to do her job. Even the funny scenes never has the function of diversion. The humor is grim, and it strikes your heart in a way that has little to do with a moment of respite.

Raša is depicted as a person with a strong will. She doggedly tries to do the best of the situation. Sometimes she does not think ahead, but she moves on. Pichler does not reduce her in any way, she is not treated with gender stereotypes - she just is. The same goes for Raša's relation to her father, or the friendship between her and a boy from the village. Nermina Lukač who plays Raša is absolutely stunning.

Against all odds Äta sova dö is an extremely hopeful film - I mean, considering this is a film about unemployment and a society of bureaucratic helplessness, this is not at all self-evident. But the kind of hope Pichler and her characters offer has nothing to do with the "optimistic" official story about entrepreneurship and you-can-be-what-you-want. This film places defiance at the core of what it means to be alive; the desire to work is not reduced to an endless adaptability - work is seen not as a rosy path of self-realization but as the daily struggle of making do. And in contrast to the official blabber about the dignity of work, Äta sova dö combines its grounded hopefulness with class politics and critique of work society, the society in which even a hobby might prove that you may be a good worker, or the society in which you are useless as a worker even though you have the skills to do something well.

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