Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn that goddamn handheld european camera thing. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn that goddamn handheld european camera thing. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 1, 2014

TARR BÉLA STEPS OUT

Looking back from 2014, Tarr Béla's second feature, The Outsider, is a staggering break from the filmmaker's normal way of doing things. That's not fair at all to the movie and moviemaker who, in 1981, had no idea that he'd one day become Europe's crown prince of long takes, slow plots, and stasis, but it's really hard not to be taken aback by it - having purposefully not done any research on the director's early films before starting this retrospective, it never occurred to me that I'd end up seeing something so willfully uncharacteristic as a Tarr film in color. Which is by no means the only thing that sets the film apart aesthetically, but still: color. Everything I associate Tarr with demands the hardness of stark black-and-white, which just goes to show that you should prejudge and make assumptions about nothing. Especially not three-decade-old Hungarian social realist films.

That would be the other big thing that separates The Outsider from Tarr's later work, and even his earlier feature Family Nest, though it is much closer to that. This is an unusually clear-cut example of European realism of a sort that would become absolutely inescapable a generation later, though in 1981 it was still a bit unusual to see something as stripped down and grotty as this story of András (Szabó András), a twentysomething young musician making ends meet in a series of ill-fitting jobs. The one we first see him practicing is as an orderly at a mental hospital; other than the chances he gets to play violin for the patients, it doesn't seem to be very rewarding, and he gets fired in fairly short order for getting drunk with a patient, anyway. For the bulk of the two-hour movie, András floats from job to job, never being very reliable or good at anything, and as a result incurring the wrath of his girlfiend, Kata (Fodor Jolan), who's already losing patience with him on account of his insistence on giving all his money to his child by an ex-lover.

That is, by the way, the entire plot. So even at his most outwardly conventional, at least we can say that Tarr makes a point of thwarting our expectations for dramatic situations that movie characters forward. Nothing moves the people in The Outsider forward; this is the whole point. The film isn't a specific indictment of a dysfunctional society, as Family Nest is, but a close examination of how that dysfunction plays out on the individual level. András is both a pitiable character and a somewhat repellent one, hoping to coast by on some foggily-expressed bohemian ideal perpetually, holding onto a very romantic and thoroughly useless idea of how True Artists fit into the world that makes him powerfully ill-equipped to deal with the realities of life in Communist Hungary. Tarr sympathises with him to a degree (as he'd almost have to, being himself a young artist at the time The Outsider was shot), but doesn't let him off the hook, regardless. His romantic outlook frequently serves as nothing but mask for laziness and the terror of having to go out and fight for scraps in a horrible environment of desperate, starving people; for all that she's a bit of a stock character, Kata's harangues to this effect are generally persuasive and it's as easy to share in her frustration and impatience as to share in his artistic struggles.

The film's running time is a bit long to sustain this simple situation; Tarr had not yet begun to master the exquisite art of using duration as a means of testing the audience, and The Outsider merely feels like there's too much repetitive dialogue, not like it's being stretched out to create a particular mood. That said, the film's slow pace and lack of affect does neatly mirror András's own life, making it a reasonably effective character study, if nothing else. It certainly helps that the non-professional Szabó (no-one in this cast was a professional) inhabits the part so comfortably and laconically, making it seem thoroughly plausible that the unfocused longeurs of the movie are exactly in tune with how his character views the world. I would want this to be no-one's first exposure to Tarr's cinema, for it is a bit pacey without earning the impact of it, but it does surely feel like there's some point to it.

To present this narrative, Tarr and his pair of cinematographers - Pap Ferenc (their second collaboration of four and Mihók Barna (their first of two, four if you count acting) - relied on grainy 16mm with flat colors and a boxy 1.37:1 aspect ratio, a whole mess of close-ups cut together with some choppiness, and all of it handheld. It was not an unknown style in Europe at the time, though it was nowhere near as commonplace as it is now, ever since the Dardenne brothers made it their preferred technique in the late 1990s. Still, even by the standards of 1981, this was hardly a groundbreaking or challenging or complex way to tell a story about poverty-ridden youth letting life slide by them. It is good realism - an acute psychological portrait and an unforgiving depiction of life on the edges in contemporary Hungary - but it is not particularly unusual realism, and the use of color simply underlines the unpleasant reality that herein lies a Tarr Béla film with no particularly aggressive and lingering visuals; even Family Nest, generally a less mature movie, had a more pointed and purposeful use for its suffocating realist interiors.

If the film challenges us, that comes in the unexpected form of its music, something else that Tarr wouldn't do much with later on; or rather, what he did with music was nothing like this at all. The Outsider is frequently punctuated with songs of all kinds: folk music, disco, rock (there's a cover of "House of the Rising Sun" that is maybe my new favorite version of that song). The film's most powerful moment finds András and Kata screaming at each other to be heard in a discotheque where András has a DJ job, playing some insipid piece of dance music about Christopher Columbus as his girlfriend tries to make her anger and frustration known; perhaps its second-best sequence comes at the end, during a rousingly amateurish performance of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 on violin. It's a little clichéd, but not therefore inaccurate, to propose that music is the film's emotional release valve: András is stalled-out and inept in all ways, but the performance of music gives him some kind of release, wakes him up, and proves that even in the midst of a lifeless wasteland like Hungary under Communism, there is a way to find some brief measure of satisfaction and expression. That's a shockingly sentimental approach for Tarr, which is why I tend to wonder if I'm not misreading it altogether; but he was young, and the film does spring to life whenever the music starts up... The point is, the film lapses into convention more often than not, but it plays those conventions well, and as part of the fledgling director's learning curve, it is sturdy and satisfying and earnest. None of which are quite as good as "creative", but you make do.

Thứ Sáu, 22 tháng 11, 2013

MOVIES I MISSED IN 2013: PERSECUTION SIMPLEX

Director Thomas Vinterberg's 1998 sophomore feature, The Celebration (or Festen; I'm never clear on which is the preferred U.S. title), is one of the agreed-upon masterpiece of 1990s cinema. That being said, I don't personally have much use for it at all, owing in part to it being the flagship of the Dogme 95 movement, for which I also don't have much use at all. So the awestruck praise that swirled around his latest, the apparent return-to-form The Hunt, at its 2012 Cannes premiere inspired, I will confess, very little in the way of confidence. Also, disliking The Celebration is one of those things that makes you a cinephile pariah, so I've put it up here first just to make sure that nobody reads this and only finds out at the end that I'm a huge asshole whose opinions aren't worth noticing.

That all being said: The Hunt works better than The Celebration, at any rate. I'm not absolutely certain how much it works, and my suspicion is that without the sobering performance of Mads Mikkelsen in the central role, it wouldn't end up working at all.

The story, as co-written by Vinterberg and Tobias Lindholm, is not unlike Arthur Miller's The Crucible, updated to modern Denmark: it is a story about how one person's off-the-cuff lie can whip up a community's paranoia and bigotry to destroy one person's life solely on the basis of rumor and scandal. In this case, Lucas (Mikkelsen), is a kindergarten teacher of the absolute best sort imaginable: he treats his students with dignity and respect, talking to them at a level that they can fully comprehend and appreciate, making sure they are cared for in all respects. This has made him a beloved fixture among the adults in the country village where he lives, and an icon to the children, especially a little girl named Klara (Annika Wedderkopp). To express her passionate crush on the teacher, she has made him a small present, which he very gently and kindly and in the most respectful way possible declines; this pisses her off, and - armed with the knowledge of a porno she saw her brother watching - she mentions oh-so-casually to a member of the school staff, Grethe (Susse Wold) that Lucas was in the habit of exposing his erect penis to her.

We have, at this point, hit the first point where I can't quite shake the feeling that the film is having me on; not that I spend too much time around five- or six-year-olds, but Klara seems to be acting with a degree of calculated, malicious intent that I really can't wrap my head around (the story most directly comparable to this that I am aware of, Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour, situates its resentful student at a much more reasonable 12 or 13). But let's not get bogged down by plot logic. Vinterberg and Lindholm didn't, after all. Suffice it to say that Klara's father, Theo (Thomas Bo Larsen), who is also Lucas's best friend, doesn't stop to wait for evidence, any more than the blabbermouth Gerthe does, and in very little time at all, the whole town is convinced that Lucas is a habitual child-rapist. The ostracism and ice-cold hatred he receives is bad enough, in no small part because of its Kafkaesque arbitrariness; but things get really bad when Lucas's teenage son, Marcus (Lasse Fogelstrøm) starts to be caught up in the witch hunt against his father, and then the physical intimidation starts to kick in, and Lucas finds himself in the bottommost pit of a nightmare, utterly confused about how he got there and horribly aware that he has no way out.

Mikkelsen is great. Let's just clarify that, and keep on doing it. When The Hunt triumphs, it is absolutely due to the way that actor captures the panicked fear of being caught in a wrong man thriller, as well as anybody ever did in the most severe of Hitchcock films. The title already suggests, and the opening scenes state it outright, that there's symbolism at play between the deer hunting that makes up one of the only forms of entertainment in this community, and the way Lucas is flushed out and abused by his former friends. And this, too, Mikkelsen captures gorgeously: the flitting, nervous energy of a prey animal is in the subtext of every part of his coiled, wiry physical performance.

The parts of the film that aren't Mikkelsen, though, are... problematic? Ineffective? Grimly one-note and miserabilist? Oh, so one-note and miserabilist. It's not fair to compare anything to The Crucible, one of the most iconic of all midcentury plays, but The Hunt courts those comparisons so readily, and it doesn't come out good from it. Vinterberg's approach to the story is unusually uniform and inflexible, and it doesn't take very long after the big pedophilia scare kicks in (about a third of the way into the movie) for it to become clear that The Hunt is a film with one single idea, that it rides into the ground and deep into the soft earth below the surface. Much like The Celebration, it isn't so much cynical as nihilistic, so involved in the worst of human behavior that it feels as much like a celebration of suffering as an exploration of it. It lacks any nuance in any character besides, arguably, Lucas's doubting girlfriend Nadja (Alexandra Rapaport) - even Lucas himself possesses no subtleties but those that Mikkelsen provides to him, for he is otherwise a cardboard martyr propped up for our sympathetic veneration, but not remotely our appreciation of human behavior, except in its most extreme and repetitive form. It's too emotionally vicious to be a slog; but it's not nearly varied enough to be much of anything else.

A few things redeem the film a little bit, enough that I feel a bit wobbly deciding between a passing and a failing grade. One of these, of course, is Mikkelsen. Another is Charlotte Bruus Christensen's cinematography, which has its problems - far too much of that damnable handheld camera "realism" that European cinema has been very slowly weaning itself from in the last several years, and the filmmakers are much too reluctant to try anything that isn't a close-up - but is far more nuanced and atmospheric than strict realism would permit for (let alone the dictatorially stringent Dogme 95), attaining a sickly kind of intimacy that allows us to fully experience Lucas's miseries along with him. And the first thirty minutes, when the film is strictly observational and interested only in how this community hums along in its resting state, is genuinely engaging and solid character studying and world building. Stacked up next to things like the unremitting, manufactured bleakness of the plot, the ludicrous epilogue, and the shallow characterisations, that's not much, but it's something.

Anyway, there's not doubt that the film gets a big emotional reaction. It might not be fair, it might not be truthful, and it might not have any discernible point, but it's there. So that's something too.

6/10