It is with this thought in mind that this column wishes that the ongoing festival be extended...indefinitely. To quote a friend, so many films so little time.
Directed by Danis Tanovic |
It is however a pleasant surprise to watch Danis Tanovic’s No Man’s Land, this year’s winner in the Best Foreign Language category. The setting for the most part of the film is a trench in between the Serb and Bosnian lines where two wounded soldiers from opposing sides confront each other for survival. The potential Waiting for Godot scenario is made worse by the presence of another Bosnian soldier lying prone on an active mine that will detonate if his weight is lifted. Add to that the bureaucratic mess that is the U.N. peace-keeping forces and you have a film as entertaining as Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 and as moving as Kubrick’s Paths of Glory.
Dispensing (for the most part) the usual political-correctness (and subsequent blandness) of most war pictures (i.e. Platoon), the film does not choose a particular side but is adamant in its condemnation of war. It also does not jackhammer its message across like a Goebbels propaganda reel but instead eases it in, displaying a flair for gallows humor and tender insight. It can be said that the film takes a genuine interest in human folly, letting the drama (and a quite a number of laughs) flow in an effortless stream of unforgettable images.
Directed by Zhu Wen |
Featuring raw performances from its lead actors, the film is an emotional tightrope, the characters’ ambiguity being the balancing stick. It’s never clear just where this odd couple is heading; the only certainty is that isn’t going to be a pretty one.
Director/writer Zhu Wen though pushes the boundary further by continuing the story long after the policeman is out of the picture. He shows us the young woman resuming her life as a prostitute and the petty joys she manages to squeeze from it. A little anti-climactic, the movie though never falters in presenting an honest, battle-scarred portrayal of the character.
Filmed with only a small digital video camera (and for the most part in secret), Seafood almost qualifies as a Dogme 95 film. But for one detail, it is faithful to the movement’s Vow of Chastity. It however lacks the verve displayed by other Dogme films like Thomas Vinterberg’s Festen or Søren Kragh-Jacobsen’s Mifune. To be fair though, Wen’s intentions may be different; the resulting film is still a bold experiment and triumphs in its own way.