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Cannes 2007 Post-Communist Filmmakers Share Their Past Experiences
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Alexandra |
His film is modest, yet surgically precise. It is a story about a girl who, in late 80s Romania under Causescu, had an illegal abortion. Her friend helps her in arranging the deed. Both women pass through humiliation, pain, trauma — all of which are difficult to put behind them. The backdrop of the story is real life socialism — drab streets, gloomy people, a brutal receptionist at a seedy hotel, a pack of Kent cigarettes being the ultimate bribe, fear and enslavement. Mungiu sends out a warning about all forms of totalitarianism and state control which robs citizens of their privacy and takes their freedom away.
The two Russian entries were of different quality. The winner at Venice, Andriej Zviagintsev with his excellent Return, was a disappointment. His Banishment was pretentious and convoluted. I will stand up in defence of the under-appreciated film Alexandra by Alexander Sokurov. It is a film about an old Russian woman who visits her grandson in an army camp in Chechnya. The movie was accused of presenting the aggressors as victims. But this is not the theme of the work; it is more a prayer for peace. The old woman, with her grumbling and down to earth questions highlights the absurdness of war and a world run by military commands. "Boys, you've grown accustomed to that war, that's a bad thing" Alexandra mutters under her breath and that - her ordinary, down to earth approach to life - is the real strength of that work.
The Cannes movies by Mungiu, Nemescu and Sokurov all make part of the general coming to terms with the past trend of post-communist cinematographers. In Berlin we saw a very interesting work by Jiri Menzel — I Served the King of England — a difficult Czech coming to terms with the 20th century. An Oscar went to Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck for his The Lives of Others, a piece on invigilation in the GDR. I see artists from this part of Europe as having an enormous baggage of experiences which they are just beginning to share with the world.
Barbara Hollender is a Warsaw based film critic of the daily "Rzeczpospolita" and co-author of the books: Stars in Close-up and Studio Tor.
| recent festivals |
Cannes 2007
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