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Still no character or class
The International Film Festival of India continues to be a
washout, three decades after its inception. Lack of planning and
organisation dog it every step of the way. The few eminent film
makers who did attend the festival had to contend with officials
who were unprepared and knew next to nothing about their films.
GOWRI RAMNARAYAN, while pointing out some of these drawbacks,
focuses on some of the films.
IFFI bashing has become virtually mandatory for film critics in
this country. And if you have been a habitue of the annual
international film festivals of India, there is really no other
go. Old timers may recall golden fests attended by Andre Wajda
and Jean Renoir. And natter about how IFFI brought world cinema
exposure for the desi movie moguls as well as auteurs.
But back in the present, at the 31st IFFI in 2000, we see that
three decades have not given it character, class or charisma.
That despite drawing world renowned names this year to dais and
hall. There was Abbas Kiarostami, eyes perpetually screened by
dark glasses, so balefully remote that you could have mistaken
him for a mafia don in a Hollywood thriller, and about as
forbidding to the press and public. "No, no interviews! I am
always misquoted." At the press meeting of the jury for the Asian
directors' competition, he sat in proud silence. Anyway,
President Mrinal Sen wouldn't let go of the mike.
Kiarostami's film brought consolation of sorts. "The Wind Will
Carry Us" was nowhere near masterworks like "Close Up", it left
too much unsaid. A city man and his unseen companions (photo
journalist and assistants?) descend on a village, letting the
natives think they are on a treasure hunt. The man wanders o'er
hill, field and cemetery, cell phone in hand, and leaves as
mysteriously as he came. But what visuals of the land! Long
aerial shots which wind round the ribbon road through the hills
and reach the village squeezed into a rocky ledge. But the
engaging geography could not indicate as much as it had done in
his earlier film "Under the Olives". The script was full of the
warmth and wit which comes from a feeling for the people who
speak it, especially the little boy guide. (One wondered anew if
anyone could beat the Iranians in depictions of children). But
the dimensions were wrought by the camera really, playing more
hide than seek with people and interiors, where patchy forms,
narrow stairs and curtained windows teased the viewer into
anticipation.
As when the visitor recites poetry in the dark basement, which is
visually shaped in the girl's hands milking the cow, and in her
lantern-lit feet. Such moments show why the film maker makes the
doctor say at the end that the best things in life are the
generosity of God and the beauty of this world. "For who has come
back to speak of a greater Paradise after death?"
Bibi Andersson, Ingmar Bergman's heroine of unforgettable films,
gorgeous in black, brushes past you before the tea stall. Your
thirst is forgotten as scenes of passion and intensity from her
"Persona" and "Wild Strawberries" crowd your mental screen. She
sparkles with mettlesome humour. (Interrupting a question about
how the great Bergman shaped her talent, she announced, "Let's
not give him credit for everything! I am solely responsible for
my own growth as an actor.") She also "commanded" the press to
trounce MGM for refusing to let IFFI screen her most powerful
portrayal in "Persona" on the pretext that IFFI was its debtor.
"The Face", a less known early Bergman, had to be screened
instead.
Fernando Solanas popped up unannounced on that occasion. His
appearance didn't disappoint you (as did his inordinately long
"The Cloud", the closing film at IFFI. This tribute to
Argentinian theatre lost focus in self conscious artiness. Cars
and people moving constantly backwards were the least gimmicky
images in its arduous passage).
Solanas was your dream come true of the Latin American artist -
handsome, white haired, romantic and surreal. Even his star
Angela Correa, a stunner if there ever was one, with a bunch of
black braids to take your breath away, could not steal the show
from him. His gesticulating Spanish was visual drama. You saluted
him for memorable films like "The Voyage" and "Tangos" where he
revolutionised your concept of narrativity, and of musical score,
through themes so rooted in the local that they became universal.
True, in general IFFI attracts few foreign stalwarts. Worse, it
does not know how best to present those who do come. All
introductions are alike; gushing, starstruck and often
hysterically unprepared. Never with dignity or substance. Before
special screenings the stage is crowded with government officials
and nubile girls who sway in and out with bouquets, awards or
lamps. And why should the awards be presented by transcient
ministers and governors? Why not by eminent film personalities?
The press meets are absolute washouts, attended mostly by regular
spot reporters, often strangers to the work of the director they
are to quiz. Sometimes, the director is presented before his/her
film is screened. Either way the standard questions are always
"Tell us something about your film", and "What are its
distribution prospects?" No wonder seasoned Indians adopt school
teacherly patience like Shyam Benegal, or studied nonchalance
like Girish Karnad did. And God help the guest who needs a
translator! The young interpreter with Solanas struggled so
ineffectually that the film maker became red in the face. A
foreign visitor offered to help, which improved things only
marginally. Frustrating because what emerged was so full of
passion and contemplative thought.
For a nondescript festival like ours, the off-again-on-again
competition section seems quite redundant.
This year's choice from Asian Directors included atrocious
entries like "The Last Malay Woman", a thoroughly regressive,
hidebound, chauvinist extolling of traditional womanhood by a
woman director (Erma Fatima Rahmad). Song, dance and music a la
Bollywood, plus the sacrifice of true love for a previous
engagement with the Muslim fanatic (who becomes a good man after
a fight with the hero in the waters, against the backdrop of
raging fire, not to forget a last minute rescue of a baby from
the flames). Worse was to come. After his village trip to recover
his lost Malayan culture, the playwright sheds his westernised
approach, and stages a new play about the woman who "offers" her
virginity to the bridegroom. Her meek surrender echoes the words
of the girl he had loved and lost, spoken to her spouse on her
wedding night! Curtains down but not before a nauseating post
nuptial shot of the stained sheet.
The winners? Well, "Khadosh" (Israel, Amos Gitai) with a special
mention passed muster. But nothing outstanding about the Golden
Peacock awardee "The Railroad Man" (Japan, Yasuo Furuhata),
though it was touching enough and made visually arresting
melodrama for the dead daughter and the living father to play
their parts. The Indian entry "Karunam" by Jayaraj which shared
this top award had nothing to recommend it except its choice of
theme, the plight of the old parents, spurned and neglected by
the young, no longer a western phenomenon for us in India. Its
unrelieved pathos was tedious as was its total absence of any
surprise. "Nang Nak" (Indonesia, Nonzee Nimibutr) which won the
Silver Peacock for the Most Promising Asian Director was an
unimaginative retelling of an old legend about the wife faithful
even after death, with no contemporary resonance or relevance.
"Postman in the Mountains" (China, Huo Jianqi) was a sound choice
for the Special Jury Award with another Silver Peacock, as a
moving document of human bonds, between father and son, of duty,
responsibility and personal commitment which takes pride in one's
work and in its contribution to the community. The retired
mailman takes his son on the long, perilous trek through the
villages strung upon the green-swathed, cloud-shawled, river-
wound mountains and introduces the young man to the residents.
Each hamlet tells a chapter in the tale, gaining weight in
flashbacks, and in unexpected verbal exchanges, even little
squabbles, between father and son. The values it promotes become
loftier as exemplified by simple folk in the rarefied regions.
Mystifyingly, the wonderful debut by Lama Khywentse Norbu in "The
Cup" was ignored by the illustrious jury (film makers Mrinal Sen,
Abbas Kiarostami, Joao Batista de Andrade, film critic Joan
Dupont, screenplay writer Jean Claude Carriere - associated with
Luis Bunuel, better known in India for his screenplay of Peter
Brooks' "Mahabharata").
This first Bhutanese feature was one of the most endearing films
at the festival, where the pathos of the Tibetan refugees was
balanced with humour. As soccer fever hits the boys in the
monastery on the Himalayan foothills, young monk Orgyen tries to
smuggle in a TV set plus satellite dish to watch the World Cup
Final. Sharp one-liners in the script keep you chuckling on your
way home, even as the figure of the old abbot surrounded by
packed trunks and dreams of a return to his homeland , haunts you
as the image we carry into the new millennium.
(To be concluded)
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