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Festivals
53rd Sydney Film Festival--Part 1
Not deep enough
By Richard Phillips
17 July 2006
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This is the first of a series of articles on the 2006 Sydney
Film Festival, held June 9-25.
The promotional tagline for this years Sydney Film Festival,
which screened 74 features, 40 documentaries and 64 shorts, was
Go Deeper and, according to a festival press release,
Sydneysiders dived in with gusto. Sales and revenue
targets exceeded predictions and there was a reported 26.5 percent
growth in non-subscriber tickets.
These increases are welcome and indicate that new layers are
being attracted to the 17-day event, which has a declining subscriber
base of mainly older patrons and in the last four consecutive
years experienced deficits, including a record $241,000 shortfall
last year.
Notwithstanding the festivals slogan, the artistic and
intellectual depth of the 33 features and documentaries seen by
this writer was limited. Although the festival provided some sense
of the world, with a large number of features about the Middle
East and a few valuable movies, many of the problems highlighted
in previous WSWS coverage of the festival are still present.
Overall, the program is still dominated by faddish or sensationalist
work, along with an increasing number of mainstream movies from
the major studios already guaranteed wide release in Australian
multiplex cinemas. In fact, more than 20 of the 74 features shown
will be in local cinemas this year. Most of these, however, are
bland or unchallenging works.
Festival organisers have yet to explain why its necessary
to screen lightweight works such as, Friends With Money,
Jennifer Anistons latest role, Little Miss Sunshine,
a comedy road movie about a dysfunctional family starring Steve
Carell (The 40 Year-Old Virgin) and Toni Collette (Japanese
Story), and similar fare at the festival. This troubling trend
no doubt reflects the increasing pressure that the major studios,
film distributors and cinema chains bring to bear on the event.
At the same time movies from the most oppressed countries,
where filmmakers are confronted with enormous practical difficulties,
are rarely shown. For example, in the eight years that this writer
has been reviewing the Sydney Film Festival there has not been
a single Sri Lankan movie screened.
Sri Lanka only produces a small number of features each year
and its filmmakers confront financial problems and increasing
government censorship. Despite these difficulties a new generation
of younger directorsVimukthi Jayasundera, Asoka Handagama,
Prasanna Vithanage and Sudath Mahadiwulvewahave recently
made dramas about the 20-year civil war by the Sri Lankan military
against the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) and its impact
on social life.
Last year senior military chiefs publicly denounced these directors,
claiming that their movies aided terrorism. Handagama and Mahadiwulvewa
were bluntly informed that they should be making pro-army
films and would have to face the consequences if the
war breaks out again. Handagamas latest film, Letter
of Fire, which is not an antiwar movie, was banned this year.
That none of this countrys movies have been shown at
the Sydney festival in almost a decade is inexcusable.
Memorable work
The festival opened with the Australian premier of Ten Canoes,
the latest film by director Rolf de Heer. The movie is set in
Arnhem Land in far north Australia and prior to European settlement.
De Heers film was one of several local features screened
that will be released around the country in the next few months.
Ten Canoes is an honest and visually lyrical film and
one that attempts to establish an objective framework for any
discussion on ancient Aboriginal culture. It will be reviewed
in later festival coverage along with an interview with its South
Australian based director.
Highlights from this years festival include US documentary
Winter Soldier and Alain Tasmas October 17, 1961.
Winter Soldiers documents a three-day conference in
February 1971 when over 120 young veterans of the then raging
Vietnam War met in Detroit, Michigan to testify about the atrocities
they had witnessed or carried out whilst in Vietnam. Those watching
this valuable documentary will clearly connect the horrors carried
out by the US military at this time and what is occurring in Iraq
today. The film should also provoke more thoughtful viewers to
ask how and why the mass movement that helped end the Vietnam
War, failed to prevent a new eruption of US militarism.
October 17, 1961, which unfortunately was given inadequate
pre-publicity by festival organisers, is a powerful drama set
in Paris during the long and bloody struggle against French colonial
rule of Algeria. It dramatises events leading up to, and including,
a police massacre of 20,000 protesting Algerians organised by
the FLN (National Liberation Front) that occurred on the titles
date. The film carefully, and with great objectivity and passion,
examines this infamous and largely unknown event. More than 10,000
Algerians living in Paris were arrested during the demonstration
and according to some estimates the police murdered up to 200
people. Many of those wounded or killed were thrown into the Seine.
While Winter Soldier will be available in Australia
on DVD later this year, no cinema chain or DVD distributor has
indicated a local release of Tasmas extraordinary movie.
Both films were reviewed in detail last year by the WSWS (see
US atrocities
in Vietnam documented and Valuable
films from France).
Asian film
It was not possible because of programming clashes to watch
many of the Asian films screened this year and I deliberately
avoided two of the latest offerings from Hong KongFearless,
a martial arts flick starring Jet Li, and Perhaps Love,
an eclectic musical directed by Peter Ho-Sun Chan. There were,
however, two Chinese featuresGrain in Ear and Dam
Streetthat were worthwhile.
Grain in Ear, written and directed Zhang Lu, explores
the difficulties confronting a young Korean single mother living
near a railway-shunting yard and on the outskirts of a Chinese
industrial city.
The beautiful but poverty-stricken woman, whose husband is
in jail, is struggling to earn a living selling Korean pickles
(kimchi) to local workers and raise her young son. She lives next
to a group of Korean prostitutes and is sexually preyed upon by
a series of local characters, including a lonely Korean married
man, a neighbour and the police. In a moment of utter despair,
she decides to poison a batch of pickles that she has been asked
to supply to a local wedding.
This is Zhang Lus second feature and apparently based
on a true story. There are over two million Koreans living
in mostly appalling conditions in China and the film provides
one of the few insights into difficulties facing this oppressed
minority.
Apart from a lengthy concluding shot, the camera is largely
static throughout, there is little or no musical soundtrack and
the actors expressions are generally deadpan. In some ways
the movie almost feels like performance art, but its minimalist
style is effective and generates its own artistic and emotional
tension.
Grain in Ears final minutes are mesmerising as
the camera follows the young mother who confronted with a terrible
tragedy decides to flee her bare one-room home, across railway
land and into adjoining fields. This conclusion, however, gives
no suggestion that she can escape her miserable existence.
Dam Street by director Li Yu is a more traditionalist
work but not without its moments. The movie explores the ostracism
of a pregnant teenage girlXiaoyun (Liu Yi)in rural
Sichuan province in early 1980s China. The 16-year-old girl and
her boyfriend are expelled from high school and then separated
from each other. Xiaoyun, with the help of her older sister who
is a nurse, has a son but told that the baby died during birth.
The child is secretly adopted out.
The film moves forward ten years and Xiaoyun, who has been
trained as a Sichuan opera singer and has some potential, works
in a lowbrow entertainment troupe. While few know about her past,
she is still ostracised by many in the local town. Without revealing
the movies plot, which to some extent is not unexpected,
she is eventually reunited with her son. While Dam Street
is not a groundbreaking work, it explores subject matter not usually
dealt in Chinas deeply restrictive political and cultural
climate.
Li Yus first drama, Fish and Elephant, which was
produced and distributed independently of government censorship
and distribution bodies, is apparently a sensitive story about
a lesbian relationship and the first film from mainland China
on this subject matter.
Other festival highlights include several films from or about
the Middle East, one or two worthwhile features from Latin America
and a Jean-Pierre Melville (1917-73) retrospective. Although the
retrospective did not include all Melvilles work it provided
an overview of this independent post-war French director and why
his influence, both good and bad, has been so extensive.
Almost half the films at the festival were documentaries but
overall, the collection was patchy. One of the more memorable
was Beyond Hatred, by French director Olivier Meyrou. A
prizewinner at this years Berlin International Film Festival,
the ninety-minute film examines the difficult but enlightened
response of the Chenu family to the brutal bashing murder of Francois,
their 29-year-old homosexual son, by skinheads in 2002. An interview
with Meyrou, who attended the festival, will be in future coverage.
Included in the other documentaries that will be reviewed is
The Archive Project, an examination of the Communist Party
of Australias film unit and secret police spying operations
against it.
To be continued
See Also:
Another sign of popular disgust
Australian film festival audience invites Mamdouh Habib to speak
about Guantánamo documentary
[1 July 2006]
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