ReportWire

Tag: Berlin Film Festival

  • ‘The Adamant Girl’ Review: P.S. Vinothraj Delivers a Radical Exploration of Gendered Traditions

    ‘The Adamant Girl’ Review: P.S. Vinothraj Delivers a Radical Exploration of Gendered Traditions

    [ad_1]

    Farcical and viscerally upsetting in equal measure, P.S. Vinothraj’s “The Adamant Girl” masterfully exposes the nature of superstition by zeroing in on gendered expectations. A story of a betrothed woman being shepherded by her fiancé’s family between sites of religious ritual, the rural Tamil-language drama plays like an extension of “Pebbles,” Vinothraj’s remarkable 2021 debut in which an abusive, alcoholic husband and his young son traverse a harsh terrain on foot to retrieve his fleeing wife. This time, the men have cars and motorcycles, while the woman has little recourse but to silently bear the brunt of their beliefs, in a movie that makes deft use of the dynamic between bodies and their environments.

    Vinothraj sets the stage by following his characters in lengthy, unbroken shots, observing their movement — or lack thereof, in some cases. He creates a sense of mood and texture around them even before they speak as he tracks them from behind. His central character, Meena (Anna Ben), remains still and silent for most of the film, as though she were in a fugue state, while her brusque fiancé, Pandi (Soori Muthuchamy), gurgles imposing dialogue despite his painfully hoarse voice. Meena chooses to be silent. Pandi insists on being heard.

    Pandi, his parents and his two wedded sisters believe Meena’s reluctance to marry him is rooted in some kind of spiritual possession. The exact circumstances of her refusal aren’t specified up front, though they have caste-centric implications when revealed. Vinothraj, in his exploration of gender, tosses a wide net over rural Indian society, analyzing numerous different family dynamics, including that of Meena’s own parents, who bite their tongues and go along with their in-laws’ planned exorcism scheme.

    The plot is simple on its surface. Pandi’s family seeks to take Meena to a holy site for a prayer offering, followed by another trip immediately after to a revered, shamanic “seer” for whom they bring a sacrificial rooster. Although Meena doesn’t speak — in fact, she makes an effort to barely emote or react — Vinothraj’s unyielding focus on her eyes and her subtle reactions creates a world of interiority, which few of the characters in her vicinity choose to see. The camera goes where society’s general consciousness, and its moral compass, do not.

    Shots of the rooster tied to stone, unable to escape, are swiftly followed by reaction shots of Meena’s unwavering gaze. She doesn’t “react” in the traditional sense, but the camera and editing work in tandem to illuminate her thoughts as she identifies with the helpless fowl. Meena sits in a rickshaw with the family’s women while the men chaperone them on motorbikes — a mechanical reflection of a wedding procession, stripped of all joy and color. Through visual suggestion, “The Adamant Girl” seems to ask at every turn: Beneath all the pomp and circumstance, is misogyny just incidental to deep-seated Indian tradition? Or is it a fixture?

    Vinothraj depicts both the sudden intimacy of violence within the family unit as well as its futility from afar, highlighting male impotence rather than dominance. Each sequence is carefully crafted, but it emerges as though it has a mind of its own. The camera goes to great lengths to capture physical and emotional spaces that seem to exist only in private, within Meena’s fantasies of freedom and reprieve. The film’s focus on ritual is often tongue-in-cheek, from extended sequences of actual traditions geared toward forcing Meena to marry Pandi, to more mechanical goings-on, like the repetitive tradition of rope-starting the rickety rickshaw. Like all traditions, it’s one that works until it won’t.

    Through Meena’s gaze, Vinothraj also captures a dynamic view of water and other liquids — a recurring visual motif that binds the film — from plastic water bottles used to refill the bikes with petrol, to bodies of water roaming free, to water used within the aforementioned rituals, and even used forcefully to wake the rooster when it seemingly passes out from the heat. Liquid is fluid; its meaning is pliable, even when applied to the rigidity of ritual. It takes different shapes, while Meena is forced to fit a singular box. None of these thoughts are expressed in words, but thanks to Ben’s impeccable performance, Meena brings even these complex ideas to life through her silent despondency and her yearning for human decency.

    The wry humor of “The Adamant Girl” goes hand in hand with its unflinching depictions of masculine insecurity and its harmful outcomes. The film is as funny as it is unsettling, but it’s ultimately liberating, albeit in roundabout ways. It builds to a stunning climax in which nothing out of the ordinary happens, but the mundane, the familiar and the wholly expected are subverted aesthetically. The camera, in this moment, suddenly embodies the very feelings of paralyzing entrapment it has been so carefully observing thus far. It’s a jolt to the system.

    [ad_2]

    Peter Debruge

    Source link

  • ‘La Cocina’ Review: Alonso Ruizpalacios Sharpens the Knives for This Look Inside a Chaotic New York Kitchen

    ‘La Cocina’ Review: Alonso Ruizpalacios Sharpens the Knives for This Look Inside a Chaotic New York Kitchen

    [ad_1]

    Before demonstrating himself to be one of Mexico’s most original and exciting new filmmaking talents, Alonso Ruizpalacios washed dishes in a bustling big-city kitchen. That experience informs every second of the “Museo” director’s fourth feature, “La Cocina,” a thrilling in-spirit adaptation of Arnold Wesker’s 1957 play “The Kitchen,” transposed from midcentury London to modern-day New York.

    A chaotic symphony of nearly two dozen characters, this black-and-white indie confection (garnished with sparing touches of color) mixes biting social critique with stylistic bravura. The setting is in the guts of a high-volume midtown Manhattan restaurant called The Grill — a hectic pressure cooker where personal and professional concerns come to a boil.

    The food looks edible at best, and a lot less enticing after we’ve witnessed the commotion that goes into preparing it. In Ruizpalacios’ version, practically the entire staff — not Rooney Mara’s pregnant waitress, but the ones touching the food, at least — are immigrants caught between the proverbial frying pan (sweating into their orders amid the midday rush) and the fire (of losing their work status, which exposes them to the risk of deportation).

    Wesker would have approved of Ruizpalacios’ changes. As the left-leaning playwright explained at the time: “The world might have been a stage for Shakespeare but to me it is a kitchen, where people come and go and cannot stay long enough to understand each other, and friendships, loves and enmities are forgotten as quickly as they are made.”

    The Mexican writer-director shares Wesker’s solidarity-minded admiration for the soldiers of food service, taking an immersive approach to their work. “La Cocina” thrusts us into the trenches, while updating the issues that threaten to derail another chaotic day in the operation — from the waitress weighing whether to abort to an investigation into roughly $800 missing from the till (almost exactly the cost of the procedure).

    Ruizpalacios actually opens the film far from 49th Street, where rats eat the leftovers of yesterday’s slop. There’s a dreamy, slightly amateurish quality to the slow-motion prologue, which follows Estela (Anna Diaz), a young Mexican immigrant with experience in a Michelin-starred restaurant, as she makes the pilgrimage to this glamorously located but otherwise unremarkable establishment to interview for a job.

    It’s a logical way in — not unlike the “Mad Men” pilot, which followed inexperienced Peggy into a daunting workplace environment, letting audiences learn the ropes alongside the new girl. Here, Estela serves as our guide, then moves to the background. She knows to drop the name of family friend Pedro (Raúl Briones), who preps poultry dishes all day at The Grill. That strategy gets her the job, even if Pedro himself is on thin ice, three strikes away from being fired.

    He shows up late for work and quickly becomes the primary suspect in the register robbery — an invention that serves to exposing prejudices at play in the workplace. Ruizpalacios toys with audiences’ assumptions as well (we can’t help but wonder who stole the money), selectively revealing certain key details — like the fact that Pedro and Mara’s character, Julia, are a couple. Come to find, she’s carrying his child.

    At 139 minutes, the movie takes its time, gradually building toward the lunchtime surge. In the quiet before the storm, the lovers stress about non-work things. Using a special ingredient Estela brought from Mexico, Pedro whips up a sandwich as a declaration of his love for Julia. She repays him with a quickie in the walk-in fridge.

    Though Briones has the showier part, Julia asserts a disproportionate power over Pedro: It’s ultimately her decision whether to keep the baby, and tied up in that choice is the fate of their relationship and his own visa status. To the extent that this kitchen serves as a microcosm through which to understand the world, “La Cocina” focuses viewers’ attention on just how much society exploits immigrant labor.

    Julia and the other white women interact with the customers, but behind the swinging doors, American citizens are in the minority. Ruizpalacios layers all the different languages in one exhilarating montage, where we see the micro-dynamics that go into making this operation run. “Speak English!” bellows the aggro guy at the steak station, brandishing his knives like he’s ready to murder someone.

    While the impatient diners (rarely seen) demand service, the line cooks shift into battle mode. The tension builds as the incoming orders accelerate, chattering away on a receipt printer Pedro comes to view as a personal enemy … until he snaps, triggered by a slur from one of the waitresses. We were warned, but who could have foreseen such an epic meltdown? Imagine “Network” anchor Howard Beale imploding in the bowels of a New York tourist trap. It’s equal parts hilarious and horrible: an over-the-top catharsis for anyone who ever punched the clock in a kitchen.

    The way Ruizpalacios handles his ensemble — nearly 20 employees, ranging from tough-love manager Rashid (Oded Fehr) to the lowliest busboy — mirrors the energy of a boisterous, late-career Altman movie, even if DP Juan Pablo Ramírez’s crisp monochrome cinematography suggests something scrappier (more in line with the helmer’s indie debut, “Güeros”). Covering so many characters requires careful choreography, especially as the kitchen spirals out of control during the lunchtime surge.

    At one point, a broken soda machine floods the premises, such that line cooks and servers alike are practically swimming to their stations. “La Cocina” confronts the craziness head-on as this industrial kitchen starts to feel like the galley of one of those Roman slave ships from “Ben-Hur.” If the United States is a melting pot, this is the furnace.

    [ad_2]

    Peter Debruge

    Source link

  • Berlin Hidden Gem: ’90s Nostalgia, Media and Horror Collide in ‘I Saw the TV Glow’

    Berlin Hidden Gem: ’90s Nostalgia, Media and Horror Collide in ‘I Saw the TV Glow’

    [ad_1]

    From beefcake Calvin Klein ads to Dungeons & Dragons, 1990s pop culture is hitting peak nostalgia. But in A24’s I Saw the TV Glow, writer-director Jane Schoenbrun examines the decade with a fresh eye, weaving a trans coming-of-age tale into a suburban horror story and a tribute to ’90s teen television. 

    Schoenbrun’s follow-up to 2021’s We’re All Going to the World’s Fair, the film follows Owen (Justice Smith and Ian Foreman play the character at different ages), a lonely teenager trying to find themselves in a body and world that both feel foreign. Owen’s life starts to change when they meet Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine), a slightly older queer teen who introduces them to a TV show called The Pink Opaque, about high schoolers battling supernatural forces. Owen and Maddy escape into the show’s fictional universe, which, while frightening in its own right, makes more sense than reality, and they bond deeply with the show’s characters.

    “It’s a very strange phenomenon that I don’t think people take seriously, but certainly as a dissociated queer kid in the suburbs, many of my closest emotional relationships were with characters on Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” Schoenbrun says, referencing one of the iconic ’90s shows that lend mythology and allegory to the film.

    TV Glow even features a cameo by Amber Benson, who played Tara Maclay, a beloved queer character on Buffy who some fans feel was ill-served by the show. “I was like, if I can put Amber Benson onscreen in my movie,” Schoenbrun says, “it’s almost this gift to myself and to others of righting a wrong.”

    Nineties kids will find the film rife with satisfying nods to the era, from allusions to Goosebumps and The Smashing Pumpkins to a supporting performance by Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst, who plays Owen’s terrifying, homophobic father.

    While Schoenbrun incorporated such allusions partly to pay tribute to things they found beautiful in ’90s pop culture, their choices speak to the ways in which culture shapes identity and helps us make sense of the world.

    “We are all ourselves, and we’re also conditioned by the invisible signals we’re receiving from all around us,” Schoenbrun observes. “At least for me, I think these glimpses of other worlds through a screen in childhood were often signals of some form of magic or otherness or possibility hidden in a way on the margins of the normative world that I was growing up in, that made some kind of promise to me. And I don’t think that this is an experience that only queer trans people go through.”

    But it’s not just identity that’s being illuminated by all those screens that surround us — Schoenbrun says media has the potential to shape our reality. “I think we look for ourselves all around us as a species, and we’re looking to our parents to tell us who we are. We’re looking to society, we’re looking at our peers. But I think, especially in our media-saturated environment, we’re looking to the glow of the screen and we’re looking to fiction to help define our understanding of reality.”

    [ad_2]

    Mia Galuppo

    Source link

  • Berlin Fest Pulls Invites for Far-Right Politicians After Backlash

    Berlin Fest Pulls Invites for Far-Right Politicians After Backlash

    [ad_1]

    The Berlin Film Festival has pulled invites for members of the German far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party for the opening ceremony of the 2024 Berlinale on Feb. 15 after a media backlash.

    “We have… today written to all previously invited AfD politicians and informed them that they are not welcome at the Berlinale,” Berlinale’s directors Mariëtte Rissenbeek and Carlo Chatrian said in a statement on Thursday.

    The invitations offered to AfD politicians Kristin Brinker and Ronald Gläser, both members of the Berlin State Parliament, led to a group of film professionals from Berlin and abroad signing an open letter to the festival protesting the decision. The letter stated the invitation to AfD politicians was “incompatible” with the Berlinale’s commitment “to being a place of ’empathy, awareness and understanding,’” the filmmakers wrote.

    Fest organizers in their announcement acknowledged “an intense discussion in the cultural sector, in the press and on social media as well as within the Berlinale team about the invitations of AfD politicians, a right-wing extremist party, to the opening of the Berlinale.”

    “Especially in light of the revelations that have been made in recent weeks about explicitly anti-democratic positions and individual politicians of the AfD, it is important for us — as the Berlinale and as a team — to take an unequivocal stand in favour of an open democracy,” Rissenbeek and Chatrian added in their statement.

    The Berlinale is largely state-funded, with the federal government providing around $14 million to the festival annually. The AfD is not currently part of the government federally or in any of the German states, but the party has been gaining support and is currently polling second nationwide at around 20 percent of the vote.

    “In times when right-wing extremists are moving into parliaments, the Berlinale wants to take a clear position by taking a clear stance with today’s disinvitation of the AfD. The discussion on how to deal with AfD politicians also affects many other organisations and festivals. This debate must be conducted across society as a whole and together with all democratic parties,” the festival added.

    The controversy over the AfD politician invites also follows in recent weeks hundreds of thousands of Germans taking to the streets to protest a report by the investigative group Correctiv that revealed details of a meeting between senior AfD members and wealthy German corporate figures where they discussed a plot to deport asylum seekers and German citizens of foreign origin en masse once they came to power.

    [ad_2]

    Etan Vlessing

    Source link

  • Berlin Film Festival Names Tricia Tuttle as New Director 

    Berlin Film Festival Names Tricia Tuttle as New Director 

    [ad_1]

    The Berlin Film Festival has appointed Tricia Tuttle, the former head of the BFI London Film Festival, to become the new director of the international film event starting in 2024.

    Tuttle will succeed Carlo Chatrian and Mariette Rissenbeek, who have co-led the Berlinale as artistic and executive directors since 2020 and will step down after this year’s edition when their respective mandates end.

    The Berlin Film Festival is the world’s second biggest international film festival after Cannes. It also hosts the European Film Market, a crucial industry gathering where independent films are pitched and sold.

    Tuttle was the director of the BFI London Film Festival during a fast-growing five-year era in which audiences nearly doubled before she stepped down after the 2022 edition. She worked as the festival’s deputy for five years before that to her predecessor Clare Stewart. She helped the festival expand outside of London with venues set up across the U.K. About one third of the festival screenings were outside London in 2021. Tuttle also worked for five years at BAFTA as film program manager.

    Speaking at a press conference alongside Claudia Roth, Germany’s culture commissioner, in Berlin Tuesday, Tuttle started by apologizing for not speaking German. She added: “I will in a year have been attending the Berlinale for more than a decade. I have always loved that Berlin is glamorous, political and provocative. It’s a hugely important meeting place for the world’s film industry.”

    Roth said: “In her interviews, [Tuttle] impressed us with her clear ideas to create a modern and team-orientated festival and timely sponsoring model. She’s the absolute best choice to lead the Berlinale. She brings 25 years of experience. The BFI London Film Festival not only had an enormous growth in audience but also importance. She made the festival more colorful and more diverse and opened it up to a wider audience.”

    Tuttle added, “The Berlinale is a leader amongst A-list film festivals — welcoming and inclusive, and brimming with a breath-taking diversity of films. It’s a festival that shows cinema as a most vibrant, often magical artform, one which can transform how we see the world and how we understand each other. What an immense thrill and privilege it is to have this opportunity to lead this important festival. I look forward to a very successful Berlinale in 2024, and to joining the team afterwards.”

    Tuttle was appointed by a six-member committee which included Oscar-winning director Edward Berger (“All Quiet on the Western Front”); producer Roman Paul (“Paradise Now”); Anne Leppin, the German Film Academy’s now sole managing director; actress and producer Sara Fazilat; State Secretary Florian Graf, head of the Berlin Senate Chancellery; and Roth.

    While Rissenbeek decided to step down following the 2024 edition, Chatrian was not given the opportunity to serve a second mandate by the governing body of the Berlinale, the Kulturveranstaltungen des Bundes.

    Explaining the decision to set a new leadership, Roth she said wished to see the festival be led and represented by one person instead of having a dual leadership.

    More than 400 filmmakers and talents, among them Martin Scorsese, Paul Schrader, Béla Tarr, Olivier Assayas, Kirsten Stewart and Margarethe von Trotta, signed a petition to protest against the culture commissioner’s decision and demand a prolongation of Chatrian’s contract.

    As announced on Monday, this year’s Berlin Film Festival jury will be presided over by Lupita Nyong’o, the Oscar-winning Kenyan-Mexican actor and filmmaker. The 74th edition will run Feb. 15-25.

    [ad_2]

    Elskes

    Source link