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Deep and Wide The 2008 American Film Institute Festival Among the many strengths of this year's American Film Institute Festival was a relatively new internationalism and, considering their venue, a relatively sharp focus on movies rather than celebrity. That's not to say there weren't plenty of klieg lights, velvet ropes, and personalities swanning about for the paparazzi, but, all things considered, the pomp didn't overshadow the movies. As our world shrinks to more real proportions, perhaps there will be more room for so-called small films. The AFI organizers and juries appear to be moving in the right direction, something of a minor miracle in a city where "the Industry" is virtually a life force. The 2008 AFI fest included some 106 features and 48 shorts from 38 countries. I saw only a fraction of the full 154, purposely skipping the most mainstream entries. Below are a handful of favorites, which should make their way to DVD, if not to a theater near you.
Playing Columbine, directed by Danny Ledonne, traces the troubled history of Super Columbine Massacre RPG, a game Ledonne invented. I'm strictly an arm's-length observer of the gaming world, and I admit to great skepticism before I screened Ledonne's film. However, according to statistics he quotes, some 75 million Americans will be between 10 and 30 by 2010, and they all will have grown up with video games. As a cultural touchstone, these games arguably already outstrip the other arts, movies and music included. Ledonne, who was in 10th grade at a nearby Colorado high school at the time of the Columbine shootings, constructed his game as an art piece, forwarding it to 20 friends. He tried to convey the "sad and lonely" feeling the boys had, how "alone they felt preparing to do this." He sought to expose details glossed over in the most familiar news reports. If only as a reflection of what was not reported in the story, the game was valuable, but Ledonne also found that people reacted very strongly to playing. The point of the game is to win, but it's "dissociative," since winning equals the most murders. The game ran into myriad problems, in particular with Slamdance, where it was subject to stringent censoring and finally removed from competition, despite earning first prize. The game's notorious history has largely to do with assumptions made by people who have never played it, or have fixed ideas about what games are. Whereas news reports allowed viewers to sit in judgment, Ledonne's game makes viewers complicit. Though over-detailed and overlong, Playing Columbine posed crucial questions about the gaming medium as a tool for communication and for art.
Like his other films, Arnaud Desplechin's A Christmas Tale merrily defies easy summation. (And there was an immediate basis for comparison, since the AFI honored him with a retrospective.) As a matriarch of a large family diagnosed with cancer, Junon (Catherine Deneuve) propels the action. Her cancer is a problem only a compatible family donor can perhaps solve. Deneuve perfectly conveys a certain detachment, an ability to see this not so much in terms of her mortality, but rather as a problem her offspring must help her solve. Among her three adult children (one also died young, from the same wasting disease she has), only Henri (Mathieu Amalric), with whom she has the most ambivalent relationship, is a genetic match. Complicating matters are the other two, Elizabeth (Anne Cosigny), who banished Henri from family gatherings several years before, and Ivan (Melvil Poupaud), the eternal peacemaker. Assorted spouses, children, and patriarch Abel (Jean-Paul Roussillon) add to the mix, with no one behaving predictably or ever quite as they should. Snatches of the film version of A Midsummer Night's Dream are seen, Shakespeare's comedy providing a loose analogy with the spats, couplings, and lost illusions of A Christmas Tale. The film pulls no punches about the nasty surprises bodies can spring on any of us. It also digs deep into parental ambivalence such as when Juno describes her dead child's abbreviated life: "all he did was die," or, in a key scene, when she and Henri discuss his willingness to save her life. Sticking close to his subjects as they move around a house teeming with photographs and personal mementos, Desplechin manages to convey a great deal of the emotional riptide that is a far more common experience of family holidays than the saccharine tsunami generally on offer in conventional Yuletide fare. A Christmas Tale shows him in excellent form.
Finally, there was Lisandro Alonso's Liverpool, a startling and demanding film that puts this Argentine director at the forefront of the most chancy current cinema. Farrel (Juan Fernandez), a merchant marine in his late forties, takes advantage of a few days in port to make the trek to his town deep in snowy Tierra del Fuego. With vodka his only steady companion, he hitches and walks to the cluster of buildings surrounding an old saw mill that he apparently called home where even indoors looks cold. This is less a town than an outpost. Aside from his bedridden, non-speaking mother, he finds his twentyish daughter, who is even less enthusiastic about him than he is about her. What would be key turning points in a conventional film are virtually asides here. Alonso uses ordinariness as his center (there are echoes of Chantal Akerman), with the traditionally dramatic marginalized, sometimes simply left out. Detail fills in for representation. You can, for example, nearly smell the closeness of Fernandez's cramped, neon-lit cabin, where socks dry on a dangling line amidst pin-ups, over a tangle of bedclothes. With his body, Fernandez expresses all the hesitations and feints of a life spent avoiding reality. What little dialogue there is offers almost no exposition. With his weary gait and stricken face, Fernandez musters a subtle, interior projection, more manifestation than performance. Alonso has affinities with Bela Tarr, but even more with Nuri Bilge Ceylan's chronicles of male despair and failure. Fernandez is often a speck in a spectacular, unwelcoming landscape, a surprisingly effective means to show the (unnamed) thoughts that torment him, summed up with dark humor by the talisman that gives the film its title. Alonso spent many months on location, which gives Liverpool a localness. The film's washed-out look captures the oppressiveness of small lives lived in large spaces. Even the indoor scenes look cold, and the town feels like the end of the world. I mention the other filmmakers simply by way of reference: Lisandro Alonso more than holds his own in their company. The AFI jury did their festival a daring favor by including Liverpool, which seems a good portent for bolder choices in the future. February 2009 | Issue
63 ALSO: More film festivals |
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