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WSWS
: Arts Review
: Film
Festivals
Vancouver International Film FestivalPart 3
Art and the facts of daily life
By David Walsh
24 October 2003
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The state of the world concerns and disturbs many artists.
So too does the state of art. And rightly so. The self-absorption,
triviality and outright banality of so many films, for example,
offends the more sensitive and intelligent directors and writers,
those least devoted to celebrity and wealth, those attached by
stronger threads to the general population and attuned to its
interests and needs. In opposition to the false and unreal studio
products, most of which seem hazardously distant from any recognizable
existence, certain filmmakers set up the principle of social
facts in the form of documentary filmmaking.
Film is a peculiar medium. As the Italian director Pasolini
noted, unlike the written or spoken language, film
expresses reality not through symbols but via reality itself.
... The cinema is a language which expresses reality with reality.
Every film (with the exception of certain experimental
works), fiction or otherwise, documents real people, whether actors
or not, in real settings. There is an inescapably concrete element
to cinema. This does not mean, however, that every act of filming
establishes the truth about the given people or settings. For
that to occur the artist must have truthful ideas in his or her
head before the camera begins to record images. Deeply
truthful images are not stumbled upon accidentally.
Of course turning on the camera on the street or at a work-place
inevitably provides pictures of life. Given the present state
of cinema, such an undertaking has an undeniable appeal, holding
out at least the possibility of something superior to the vast
majority of the bombastic commercial products and self-indulgent,
empty-headed art films. However, to arrive at a serious
grasp of any aspect of daily life requires an understanding of
its social basis. Images without adequate social or historical
context can turn reality on its head. This is the everyday method
of the major media outlets. There is no reason whatsoever to imitate
them.
In any event, no purely spontaneous act occurs in art. At what
and at whom one chooses to train a camera and when one turns the
apparatus on and off, these are decisions that already reflect
a definite world outlook. That the artist is only dimly aware
(as is generally the case at present) that he or she operates
with such distinct conceptions only means that an entire series
of unstated connections and assumptions, reflecting the influence
of the socially-dominant, bourgeois outlook, enter unconsciously
and uncriticized into the work.
This brings us to the case of Tiexi District: West of the
Tracks, the 9-hour documentary (in three parts) from China
directed and shot on video by Wang Bing. I have to confess that
I did not see all nine hours, but I viewed a large enough portion
(six and a half hours) to get some sense of the whole.
The work looks at life in the Tiexi district of Shenyang, in
northeast China, according to the films on-screen text,
the oldest and most extensive industrial manufacturing
center in the country. Originally built to produce armaments for
the occupying Japanese army in 1934, the factories were shifted
to civilian use after the Mao regime came to power in 1949. In
the following decade the district was built up, with the USSR
providing a good deal of the industrial equipment, much of it
having been seized from a defeated Germany. In all, the Soviet
Union financed 157 industrial projects in the region. After the
Sino-Soviet split, many industrial projects were relocated to
central China; some 100 remained. The work force reached an all-time
high of over one million in the 1980s. In the early 1990s the
industries began to falter. In 1999 they began to shut down, one
by one.
The first part (245 minutes) of Wangs film, Rust,
centers on the closure of three factoriesa smelting plant,
an electrical cable manufacturer and a sheet metal factory. Remnants
(178 minutes), the second part, examines the fate of workers and
young people living in the districts employee housing, now
scheduled to be demolished by developers. Rails (133 minutes),
the third section (which I did not see), deals with the fate of
the rail system, focusing on a scavenger and his son.
Wang Bing, born in 1967, studied in the cinematography department
of the Beijing Film Academy. He explains in his notes, From
1992 to 1995, I went to the Tiexi Heavy Industry District many
times to study the areas history. Based on my experiences
there, I began to work on my documentary film Tiexi District
in 1999. He shot 300 hours of video footage during the course
of the next two years. Wang told an interviewer, Before
I went to university I worked there [in one of the factories]
and similar places for 10 years. Also, I spent some time on the
job, training there. So they [the workers] knew me. When I was
filming, everyone gave me a tremendous amount of help. From the
very beginning, we got along. There was a sense of mutual understanding,
of mutual respect.
There is a deeply admirable and sincere quality to Wangs
effort. He has chosen quite deliberately to devote his artistic
skill to the portrayal of the lives of the people in the
factories from the time that there was a working state
economic plan up to very recently. I wanted to capture on film
the way people livedthe life of the workers in the factories,
and the way the factories dealt with their employees. I care about
whats happening in China, and thats why I made the
film. At the Berlin film festival Wang explained that none
of his nine-hour film could be shown in China; its only screenings
have been at cafes and school clubs.
If the word naturalistic is to be employed anywhere,
than it deserves to be applied to Wangs artistic method.
He points his camera toward his subject matter and records everything
that happens. There are long sequences shot from a train crossing
the snow-bound, bleak industrial district. In the 4-hour Rust
the director sits at one end of a factory locker-room or lunch-room
and films silences, conversation, games of mahjong, fights, monologues.
In Remnants his camera follows the mostly youthful subjects
as they joke, flirt, chat and quarrel in hovels, streets and stores.
Wang even records his own efforts to make his way by foot through
the snow and rubble, complete with heavy breathing, stumbling,
etc.
Some of the sequences are fascinating and revealing, while
others are extremely tedious and unrewarding. The workers in Rust
prove to be angry and discontented, but generally confused by
the introduction of a free market economy and the
closure of their factories. Their conditions are terrible; they
often work without masks or other protective equipment in vast,
decaying, pollution-ridden enterprises, which seem to belong to
another era. Here are some of the voices in Rust:
-I hear were getting paid next month.
-Thats what they say. The bosses and [Communist Party]
cadres have it easy, they dont have to work overtime.
Another worker:
-Thirty years! What a waste! ... They said wed have a
job for life, pension, health care, a safety net. What a joke.
They dont care if you get sick, much less if you die. Next
thing you know the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] will start calling
itself the Republican Party.
And others:
-The bosses have gotten rich ... What kind of society are we
living in? Its like what they say in biologya life
or death struggle. What Im talking about here is survival
of the fittest.
-I can barely afford to eat. Were all people, right?
Were all the same, but were falling behind. Were
not educated, but we read the papers, we read the news. We know
how our lives compare [to those of the better off].
One of the final scenes takes place in a facility where the
lead smelter workers undergo chelation, to remove the toxic residue
from their blood. The workers remain there for a month. They watch
porno films, sing old revolutionary songs, go shrimping
in a shallow pond. One man drownsis it a suicide? The atmosphere
is immensely depressed and depressing.
The workers filmed in Rust are hostile to the factory
authorities and the Beijing regime, but politically limited in
their responses. Some accept the official argument that the plants
should be closed and their jobs destroyed because the facilities
are not profitable. An air of resignation hangs over the factories
and their workers. The absence in their lives and experience of
a left-wing critique of Stalinism makes itself felt sharply and
tragically.
The adolescents in Remnants are even less prepared.
As the notes for the film explain: While the adults in the
neighborhood worry about factory closures, layoffs and financial
pressures, the teens are preoccupied with their own lives and
concerns: Seventeen-year-old Bobo is busy chasing after Nana,
a girl from the neighborhood who wont give him the time
of day; seventeen-year-old Chi Ying and her boy-friend Yi Xiu
find their relationship imperiled by their constant bickering;
eighteen-year-old Wang Zhen busily scribbles angst-filled love
letters to a girl he likes, only to be mocked by his friends;
eighteen-year-old Qu Jian, living with relatives after his parents
divorce, does his best to track down his absent mother while helping
to support his family with piece-work packaging chopsticks; and
seventeen-year-old Ren Huan is an orphan, who finds himself very
much alone in the world.
These kids live in a district about to be torn down by private
developers. The situation is desperate. Many of the residents,
unhappy with the tiny apartments offered them as compensation,
refuse to move. The developers begin to demolish the district,
threatening and intimidating those who remain, cutting off the
water and electricity. Again, however, the resistance is disorganized
and largely futile. Parts of this three-hour film are interminable.
Tiexi District raises and touches upon enormous historical
questions, including the nature of the Chinese revolution and
Maos Stalinist regime, the origins of the modern Chinese
working class and the present economic crisis threatening the
jobs and lives of tens of millions of Chinese workers.
The monumental character of the issues raised and
touched upon finds a reflection in the length of the
film, in its sheer quantity, but not in its quality, not in its
analysis. Wang apparently shares the limited and more or less
resigned attitude of many of the workers: I wanted to capture
that way of life [working in a state-owned industry] and show
how its disappearing. Its actually a very personal
thing for me. He disavows any element of protest or political
activism.
The director says of the workers, The idea of having
a voice is not really something they would think of. These people,
the class they belong to, would not even understand the idea of
someone giving a voice to their problems. All they do is worry
about everyday life, on a daily basis, as it comes to them. They
only worry about the things that affect them immediately. It wouldnt
even occur to them that they could voice an opinion. They dont
expect much from life.
This is a fairly sweeping statement. Mass workers protests
have already taken place in China and the objective reality of
shattering economic change will intrude on even the most passive
and everyday, immediate consciousness.
In any event, even if a given group of workers were unable to
see beyond their noses, why should the artist be obliged to share
their outlook?
Of course the filmmaker, like the workers, has grown up under
Stalinism and faces great ideological and intellectual obstacles.
One cannot blame him for the consequences of the suppression of
left-wing ideas by the Beijing regime. He belongs to a generation
of intellectuals that is very much at sea politically: disgusted
and repulsed by the Communist Party and its policies
of repression and so-called socialism with Chinese characteristics;
suspicious of American and Western capitalism and the consequences
of globalization; and, at the same time, largely cut off from
a Marxist analysis of these complex processes. This leads to all
sorts of artistic-intellectual vulnerabilities, hybrids and miscalculations.
Taking the difficulties into account, however, one must still
say what is: Wangs notion that he can convey the
essence of his protagonists lives through extensive filming,
through the sheer bulk of the details of their daily existence,
is mistaken. Not in nine hours, not in 300, not in 3000 hours,
could the life of the district during the course of even one hour
be captured in its entirety. And if one could reproduce
on film every detail of each life in the district that would still
not provide the key to unlocking the secret of its existence.
For that one has to penetrate to the inner reality of the social-class
structure, which inevitably involves a removal, at least temporarily,
from the mass of immediate facts through the process of abstraction.
Whether in fiction or documentary filmmaking, some means of artistically
clarifying and concentrating the decisive features of social reality,
which remain invisible to the naked eye, has to be found.
Otherwise the result may be, as in the present case, a great sprawling
mass of everyday detail, which tends to play into the notion that
the social process is either inexplicable or unalterable, or both.
Current attitudes in intellectual circles in North America
and Europe do not necessarily contribute to clearing up the confusion.
In his short description of Tiexi District, Vancouvers
Asian films programmer Tony Rayns comments, Theres
no expert opinion, no economic analysis and no pretense
that this is a microcosm of China. In a comment on Morning
Sun, a film treating the Maoist Cultural Revolution, Rayns
returns to this theme, writing that the directors of the film
dont pretend to explain the Cultural Revolution.
One senses that the filmmakers would probably agree with these
comments.
Its not a matter of picking on Rayns or Wang or anyone
else, these notions are thoroughly commonplace in film and artistic
circles. Nonetheless, they deserve to be challenged.
Naturally, no work of art, fictional or documentary, could
possibly be expected to present an all-sided explanation of any
complex social or historical phenomenon. Art cognizes reality
by its own means, which are more indirect and roundabout, more
linked to the unconscious, the intuitive and the non-rational
than those of science or historiography. Nonetheless, if a film,
in its overall structure (dramatic plot or organization of documentary
material), does not attempt to reflect reality, to bring out the
essential pattern of human relationships, then what is its purpose?
To pick up a camera or a paint-brush is an inherently presumptuous
act. It implies that the artist believes he or she has something
new to contribute to peoples understanding of themselves
and their relations to one another. Wang Bing speaks very modestly,
perhaps too modestly of his aims, but when he acknowledges his
desire to portray or capture on film the
lives of the workers, whether he likes it or not, the process
of separating what he considers the essential from the inessential
(nine hours out of 300 hours of video footage) involves an attempt
at some level to explain the deeper tendencies in Chinese society.
The problem is not that Wang makes no attempt to explain events
or offer an expert opinionevery meaningful work of art inevitably
does thatbut that his explanations and expertise are not
informed by a penetrating social and historical understanding.
A great deal of water has to have flowed under the bridge to
reach the point where it is accepted by filmmaker and critic alike
that the verb to explain ought to be placed in quotation
marks in a discussion of artistic work. Pat, simplistic or self-serving
explanations are obviously no use in any sphere of intellectual
life, but art cannot possibly flourish if it pledges ahead of
time not to try and make sense of the world to its audience.
See Also:
Vancouver International Film Festival--Part
2
Critical and intelligent voices, not squeezed lemons
[20 October 2003]
Vancouver International Film FestivalPart
1
Toward a painstaking analysis of what actually is
[16 October 2003]
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