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Festivals
54th Berlin Film FestivalPart 1
Disentangling dark and difficult cinema
By Stefan Steinberg
20 February 2004
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Last years Berlin Film Festival took place as storm clouds
gathered for an impending US-led invasion of Iraq. This year,
in a somewhat sombre comment, festival director Dieter Koslick
warned his audience on a number of occasions that many of the
films featured at this years competition dealt with dark
and difficult themes. If people wanted entertainment,
he said, then they could always go to the cinema.
In fact, the competition selection included a handful of films
dealing with political themes and social issues (Country of
My Skull by John Boorman, Monster by Patty Jenkins).
In addition, the clash of cultures and the possibilities of reconciliation
were also concerns in films such as Beautiful Country by
Hans Petter Moland, Ae Fond Kiss by Ken Loach and Head
On [Gegen die Wand] by Fatih Akin, which won the festivals
Golden Bear main prize and will be dealt with in a separate article.
A number of films in the Panorama section of the festival were
dedicated to the economic and political consequences of economic
globalisation. The section opened with a feeble and didactic South
Korean contribution entitled Capitalist Manifesto: Working
Men of all Countries, Accumulate! (Kim Gok, Kim Sun), which
sought to update Marxs Communist Manifesto for the
new global eralargely by equating modern business practice
with prostitution. For the second year running, the Retrospective
section of the Festival featured films from the 1960s and 1970s.
At the 53rd Festival, alternative European film from those
decades was highlighted, while this time the festival presented
a range of so-called New American cinema from the
same period. In comparison to the formulaic and predictable films
currently churned out by Hollywood and many other national film
industries, much of the cinematic material from the 1960s stands
out for its freshness, vitality and readiness to take up unconventional
stories. Nevertheless, as we shall see, a tendency exists to look
back nostalgically and regard such work through rose-tinted spectacles.
The films on offer at the 54th Berlinale made clear that an honest,
critical assessment of both the strengths and weaknesses of cinema
from the 1960s would be of great assistance in reorienting modern-day
filmmaking.
The Festivals Silver Bear was awarded to the film
Witnesses (Svjedoci), a drama made in Croatia. Witnesses
deals with the murder by three Croatian soldiers of a man alleged
to be a criminal. The incident is set in the thick of the recent
Balkan conflict. A young girl who has witnessed the murder is
taken hostage by the soldiers and is to be disposed of at a later
date. Following the murder, a police investigator and journalist
take up the search for those responsible.
Director Vinko Bresan (whose previous films include How
the War Started on My Island [1996] and Marshal Titos
Spirit [2003]) refuses to take sides in the recent Balkan
war. In press notes, he comments: I dont think nationality
is an issue for the human story in Witnesses. Whether I
am a Croat or Iraqi or American doesnt really matter.
Indeed, in the face of hostile nationalist reactions, the director
had to defend his decision to cast a well-known Serbian actress
to play the lead role of a Croatian mother in his film.
A camera shot is repeated on a number of occasions during the
filmbut from slightly differing perspectives. After the
crime has been committed, we witness the cordoning off of the
scene and the arrival of the investigating police officer. From
the same starting point, the film then branches off to relate
the subsequent events from the standpoint of different characters.
Witnesses also contains a series of scenes intended to
show the futility and arbitrary nature of war. The director is
evidently concerned about addressing issues such as passivity
and compliance by the population at large confronted with criminal
acts carried out in the course of war.
While Bresan quite correctly refrains from favouring a Croatian
or any other national standpoint, the underlying motive of his
film is weakall viewpoints have an equal weight and all
one can do is avoid jumping to conclusions. The recent catastrophic
Balkan war, fuelled and ignited by Great Power interests, has
been followed by a catastrophic peace, characterised by economic
collapse, mass unemployment and social misery. Coming to grips
with present-day reality in the Balkans calls for more than a
humble appeal for the willingness to listen to ones neighbours,
and Bresans film contributes little to understanding the
root causes of the re-emergence of nationalism and war in the
Balkans.
American films at the Festival were generally disappointing.
Cold Mountain opened the festival and has already been
reviewed by the WSWS. The Missing is a predictable work
from a director, Ron Howard, whose recent movies generally have
an uncanny knack of reinforcing conservative ideological and moral
values. Publicised as part of a current revival of the American
Western, The Missing features a young woman who takes up
arms and unites with her estranged father in a bloody hunt across
the American West. Glorifying the sanctity of the family and the
power of the gun, The Missing echoes themes close to the
hearts of the current administration in Washington.
The Final Cut features Robin Williams in a science fiction
thriller set in the near future. The plot revives themes and motifs
taken up by other movies such as Blade Runner and the Matrix
trilogyin this case, mechanical implants in the human brain
can record sensations and memories, and are then subject to abuse.
Like the Matrix trilogy, the film attempts in a vague fashion
to feed upon genuine contemporary fears of a omnipresent surveillance-state,
but also like the Matrix trilogy, an unlikely story opening
spirals into increasing absurdity, and any initial interest in
the film wanes rapidly. The most interesting US contribution at
the festival was the debut film by director Patty Jenkins,
Monster.
Monster
Monster is a fictional accounting of the adult life
of Aileen Wuornos, executed in Florida, in October 2002, after
spending 12 years on death row. Wuornos was found guilty of killing
seven men in the course of her career as a prostitute. Upon her
capture and during her trial, the media in America exploited every
opportunity to sensationalise the life and career of this female
serial killer.
The writer and director of Monster, Patty Jenkins, entered
into a written correspondence with Wuornos, and her film attempts
to re-enact experiences from the latters life that were
instrumental in her passage from prostitute to murderer.
Jenkinss film firmly makes the point that many of those
convicted and condemned by the courts (and media) as irredeemable
murderers are themselves victims of violence at an early age.
Wuornos was repeatedly raped by her fathers best friend
and then beaten and blamed by her own father when he found out.
Already severely disturbed as a young girl, Wuornos begins a career
as prostitute at the age of just 13.
When the film begins Wuornos, played by South African-born
actress Charlize Theron, is a physical and mental wreckhomeless,
alcohol-dependent and scrabbling in dustbins for something to
eat. She sees danger around every corner and a potential threat
in every encounter.
In a bar she meets the lonely Selby Wall, finely played by
Christina Ricci, a young woman whose own homosexual inclinations
have brought her into conflict with her church-going, conservative
Southern family. The two strike up an uneasy relationship in which
the thoroughly unstable Wuornos plays the role of breadwinner.
The film graphically depicts the appalling humiliations and violence
suffered by Wuornos as she attempts to survive as a prostitute,
selling her services to complete strangers on the highway. After
one such encounter, and in an act of self-defence, she shoots
a customer turned rapist.
Against a background of her own fear and hatred of the mercenary
men who have dictated the terms of her life, Wuornos is precipitated
into a spiral of violence where, at a certain point, the murder
of her customers becomes more profitable and less damaging to
herself than the act of prostitution itself.
The film, however, adapts itself to the current political climate
in America, where the media and political establishment have undertaken
a remorseless offensive to criminalise large sections of the urban
poor, and then taken it upon themselves to decide which ones should
be executed. Monster undoubtedly pulls its punches. As
soon as the camera pulls back from its attention to the relationship
between Wuornos and Selby to deal with American society at large,
the image becomes vague and blurred. The only reference to American
politics in the film is one scene where Wuornos dreams of a different
life with a proper career, even the possibility of becoming
president. In another cursory scene, dealing with the general
social environment of that period, we witness a further humiliation
after the uneducated and unqualified Wuornos has tidied herself
up but is still unable to get a job as a secretary in a lawyers
office.
Theron, who underwent a significant physical transformation
to play the role, insists that the film should be seen primarily
as a love story. We wanted to tell a true story, and not
make a lets have sympathy with the serial killer
film. But, in fact, Monster ducks the issue of which
is more monstrousthe crimes committed by Wuornos or a system
that condemns millions, like her, to misery, degradation and violence.
Wuornoss crimes were committed at the end of the 1980s
during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, who inaugurated policies
that led to an unprecedented growth of social inequality in American
society. This period witnessed huge tax cuts for the rich as well
as the dumping of social programmes. The celebration of personal
egotism as the supreme social principle was bound up with the
rise of a plutocracy thoroughly indifferent to the social costs
of its plundering of the economy. With growing social exclusion
and misery, it was no accident that during the Reagan presidency
the cells of death row filled to overflowing and the numbers of
executions rose dramatically.
Monster avoids all of these issues and at the same time
merely mentions her execution in the films closing credits.
In fact, director Nick Broomfield in his documentary film Aileen:
Life and Death of a Serial Killer, which deals with the exploitation
of the Wuornos case by the media, features footage making clear
that Wuornos was insane at the time of her execution. In the period
leading up to her execution, the born-again Christian Wuornos
declared that she was being controlled by police radio waves and
stated that after her death she would be escorted to heaven accompanied
by angels travelling in a spaceship.
A number of film reviews have favourably compared Monster
to other US films from the late 1960s and early 1970s that took
up the antagonism between the outsider/outlaw and
the broad conservative mass of societyfilms such as Bonnie
and Clyde and Badlands. If the filmmaker were indeed
imitating such films, such an effort would contain the dual danger
of repeating some of the weaknesses of those earlier films as
well as ignoring the vast changes that have taken place in American
life since the 1960s and 1970s. No doubt, filmmakers can and must
learn from filmmaking of the past, but they also have the central
responsibility to imbue their own work with new vigour based on
an understanding of the fresh content of social life.
See Also:
Not quite a serious work
Cold Mountain, written and directed Anthony Minghella
[7 January 2004]
53rd Berlin Film FestivalPart
1: Varied responses to the state of the world
[7 March 2003]
Florida execution
of Aileen Wuornos: another morbid media spectacle
[11 October 2002]
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