Friday 17 May 2024

manchurian candidate (w&d john frankenheimer, w. richard condon, george axelrod)

It had been a while since I visited my home from home. I had avoided the festival which took place during turismo altogether. I didn’t have the energy. I was travelling, I was rehearsing, I was too busy and the truth is that Cinemateca isn’t the same in the festival . Of course the festival has its charms, but I prefer Cinemateca without the hype. A screening of The Manchurian Candidate, the Monday after the festival, the night before I left for London, was ideal. Cinemateca was back to being half full, with familiar faces, the cinema tragics, como yo.

The Manchurian Candidate is a funny old film. Paranoia, war, humour and some crackerjack neo-HItchcockian dialogue between an oddly sympathetic, low status, Sinatra and a criminally underused Vivian Leigh, oozing screen charisma, even if her relationship with Sinatra’s Major Marco is completely superfluous to the plot. A film that came at the start of the sixties and predicted everything, from Kennedy to Trump, yet doesn’t seem to want to take itself nearly as seriously as those paranoid thrillers of the seventies, when the true extent of Frankenheimer’s Cassandran powers were revealed.

And now am sitting in Carrasco airport, looking out over the runway, where military planes share the space with a handful of passenger jets, and think about how in ’62, when the Manchurian Candidate was made, this view would have seemed equally mundane, with little intimation of the events which the film foreshadowed. Events which would destroy this tranquility and devastate whole generations. 

Tuesday 14 May 2024

my name is adam: children of the ghetto volume 1 (elias khoury, tr humphrey davies)

How should we read this book? It’s several years since I read Khoury. Yalo and White Masks both looked at the Lebanese wars which ravaged Beirut during my youth. Here, he turns his attentions to Palestine and the Nakba. There are two narrators: Khoury himself, who in a preface tells us that what we are about to read are the notebooks of Adam Danoun, an Arab-Israeli who he knew in New York, who had protested against the fictions in his novel Yalo. So doing, the author validates the scrappy, discursive nature of the novel, which includes stories within stories, endless asides, and a long opening sequence about medieval Arab poetry. However, there is artifice at work here. Because the story of the Nakba cannot be conveyed in clean lines. Due to the way that history has sought to crush the Palestine soul and spirit, stealing its land and its right to speak, the events of 1948 are inevitably shrouded in speculation and myth, an oral tradition, as hazy and open to distortion as the stories of the early Arab poets. Khoury’s self-avowed unreliable narrator helps to lead us, tiptoeing through the story of his birth in the ghetto of Lydda, now renamed as Lod, and the terrible events of those days when the town was annexed by the IDF. Even the idea of a ghetto is one that has been imported by the Israelis from Europe and imposed upon a Palestine population whose lands and homes were being seized. Finally, Adam meets up in New York with a fellow Palestinian, fifteen years older than him, who experienced the gruesome war crimes, the burial squadrons, the hunger. All those things which are being repeated once more in the charnel house of Gaza.

If there was anyone I should like to talk to regarding Gaza, whose perspective I would value, it would be Khoury. The messiness of this novel feels like an honest reflection of the world it has taken upon itself to depict or reveal. Beneath the hatred, Khoury locates the common ground. He references other Palestine writers, but also Israeli writers, including Oz. The value of literature as a way of understanding what seems beyond the scope of understanding is fundamental to his work. The lengthy sequence on Waddah and the other Arab poets only serves to reaffirm this: from where will we gain our understanding of the medieval mind, if not from the words they left behind.  


What interests me about this novel isn’t its admission of the crime, important though that is, but its ability to trace the outline of the mute Palestinian, who was to become one of the staples of Israeli literature, and to infer the underlying meaning of the founding of the Zionist state, which is that for the Jews to become a people like other peoples – “other peoples” here meaning European peoples – they had first to invent their own Jews.


“Listen, guys,” said Ma’moun. “These people know nothing. They think they’re in Europe. They’ve come and they’ve brought the ghetto with them so they can put us in it.”


“No! I bear no grudge against the Jews. They too die and as soon as they die become dead people just like us and cease to be Jews. We stop being us and they stop being them, so why the killing? I swear I don’t get it. I don’t have a grudge against anybody, but why?


The eaten-away face of the young girl became imprinted on my heart and has remained with me throughout my life. This is what people are. People are cadavers. Even children who look like angels are cadavers.

Sunday 12 May 2024

the annual banquet of the gravediggers’ guild (enard, tr. frank wynne)

A change of tone for Enard, a writer who wears his influences on his sleeve. The Annual Banquet shifts away from the Mediterranean and the Orient into the deep French heartland, the Norman countryside near the Atlantic, the land of Rabelais and Villon. An anthropologist goes to study the locals and finds himself gradually seduced by their down-to-earth ways. The anthropologist, David Macon, starts and ends as narrator, but in between becomes a marginal figure as Enard uses both the landscape and the Buddhist notion of resurrection to probe the history of the region, from the time of the English invasions to the revolutionary era to the Second World War, with a brief cameo from Bonaparte himself. If this is a typically erudite approach to the art of writing a novel, then the generally gentle affectionate tone is not nearly so customary. The novel is like going for a four seasons walk through this countryside, where some days are sun-dappled, others icy, others morose, but beyond the restless presence of death itself, or ‘the great wheel’ as the novel puts it, there is always the prospect of a heart-warming vegetable soup to be had at the end of the day. The Buddhist framework is an elegant device, and the gravediggers at the heart of the book are suitably Rabelaisian. If anything the novel leaves the reader, accustomed to Enard’s more hard-edged work, with the sensation that the writer might be slipping into a mellifluous late middle age, which he is entitled to, but I can’t help suspecting this is a detour on the Enard road, rather than an endpoint. 

Friday 10 May 2024

strandings: confessions of a whale scavenger (peter riley)

What do you do when you’ve been obsessed with whales all your life, to such an extent that you’ve become an expert on Moby Dick? Of course, you write a book about it, non-fiction, trying to make sense of your psychological deviance and looking for a way to incorporate this into the history of a country which has engaged on a course of deviant psychological damage. A country which has become a beached whale, just as you are a beached whale, just as a beached whale is a beached whale. It’s a somewhat tenuous theory, but Riley milks it for all it’s worth and the book includes revelatory moments. Above all in the way it traces the evolution of a beached whale society, the scavengers and fetishists who feel the pull of the whales, just as the whales themselves feel the pull of the tides which erroneously cause them to commit an auto-de-fe by choosing land over water. These characters represent an alternative Britain, none more so than the mythical ‘Big Blue’ to whom a truly wondrous chapter is dedicated, a character so Dickensian he feels he really ought to be fictional. These oddballs, some using the whale as a metaphor for the possibilities of Brexit, as opposed to the author’s use of the metaphor as the catastrophe of Brexit, construct a fascinating map of the island’s coastal regions, the point of elision between the values of the nation state and the values of the deep. At times it feels as though Riley slightly overplays his hand as he seeks to impose his map of the whale territory on the map of the country, but this is nevertheless a book that conjures out of its unlikely thesis an engaging, off-centre read. 

Wednesday 8 May 2024

nostalgia (mircea cărtărescu, tr. julian semilian)

Cărtărescu’s fame has spiralled in recent years. The Twiterati are in a state of extreme excitement whenever his name crops up. Nostalgia is my first dive into his writing, and it’s clear that the author possesses what they always called back in my Writer’s Room days “a voice”. Nostalgia consists of five stories which are at most obliquely connected. The first deals with a Russian roulette player, who defies the odds. The last with an architect who creates the music of the spheres. Both these stories are breathlessly brilliant, in the way the writer’s imagination appears to stretch the boundaries, pushing the stories beyond any anticipated limits, in the process questioning the laws of probability and physics, respectively. These stories bookend three more which inhabit the middle of the book, and which this reader found heavier going. The intricacies of the writer’s mind at times seemed to overwhelm the scope of the story he was relating, or at least that was how it felt. The stories become ornately baroque and the quixotic Bucharest they occur in sometimes gets lost in the whorls and arpegios of the text. Or perhaps it was just the wrong week to be reading it. 

Monday 6 May 2024

zone of interest (w&d jonathan glazer)

We watched this film in Montevideo at the exact same time it was being garlanded on the west coast of the United States. When I got home I watched Glazer’s honourable speech, the only one with the courage to mention Gaza, something that watching his film at this moment in history inevitably calls to mind.

There have been so many films that have used the Holocaust as a dramatic trope. Some with more justification than others. The issue with the events is how to present them. To seek to show or communicate the reality of a reality that will always be beyond representation. As such the Holocaust represents an artistic and philosophical conundrum and one that is particular to cinema, that most ‘realistic’ of the arts. Glazer is more aware than many of the fact. His film deliberately veers beyond realism from the very opening shot of blackness, which is held for long enough to make the audience question if all is right in the cinema, the world. Another sequence involves a flower dissolving, a la Jarman, to a red screen, which is again held. There are white out moments too. At other points a girl is seen in infra-red, leaving fruit to be discovered - a storyline which only became clear after the film had finished.

However, the majority of the film occurs in naturalistic colour, as the Hoss family go about the daily lives in the shadow of atrocity. All of which brings to the fore one of the key problematics of Glazer’s film. Rather than pondering the realism of what is seen, we end up pondering the aesthetics. The shots of flowers are beautiful. Is there room for beauty in the world he depicts? Is it appropriate? The issue isn’t a moral one: it’s that the question itself leads towards a contemplation of aesthetics rather than the subject matter which the film is dancing around. A similar thing occurs with the award winning sound mix, which seeks to represent the off-stage atrocities. In the end, it felt to this viewer as though this tool was used to hammer home the film’s point. Zone of Interest seeks to be a subtle film, but it utilises cinematic recourses which are profoundly unsubtle. It’s a film about the holocaust which ends up as a film about cinema and its limits. Every visual or auditory nuance seems to throw into question the project as a whole.

Having said all of this, and having returned to see Glazer’s brief discourse, it needs to be acknowledged that the filmmaker is only raising these questions because he is pushing the limits of the medium, in all sorts of ways, some of them the he could never have anticipated as he was making the film. Just as the bricks and mortar of the concentration camp overshadow the Hoss’s home, so the barbarity of the unbridled attack on Gaza’s civilians will always be destined to overshadow the walls of Glazer’s Zone of Interest. 

Thursday 2 May 2024

cuckoo land (tom burgis)

Tom Burgis tells us things we already know, but he does it with great verve, removing the mask of his prey, the lawyer/ philanthropist/ financier, Mohamed Amersi. Burgis connects the dots between Amersi’s donations to the Conservative Party and his close association with then chairman, Ben Elliot, who also happens to run Quintessentially, the horribly titled service provider to the rich and famous. (As well as being Camila’s nephew.) I’d quite like Burgis to do a book about Ben Eliot, a figure who has managed to turn Britain’s creepy reputation for class excellence into a global brand, when about all we have to left to sell, having butchered all our industries, is a commodified version of our class hierarchy. There aren’t any great revelations in the book, but the way Burgis stands up to his subject’s legal bullying is impressive and the sly verbatim accounts of the conversations he had with Amersi reveal the crude power-plays that underpin his subject’s craven grab for power and money. Sic transit gloria mundi. 

Sunday 28 April 2024

the teachers’ lounge/ das lehrerzimmer (w&d ilker çatak, w. johannes duncker)

This is the kind of film that the UK, for all its reflected Hollywood glory, doesn’t seem to produce anymore. Taut socially conscious dramas. Perhaps all the energy for making them goes into the more lucrative arena of high-end TV. The film deals with the travails of Carla, a sympathetic teacher of Polish descent in a German school. When she realises that someone is stealing from her, she sets a trap, little realising that the person who will end up caught in the trap is herself. The film explores a variety of issues, from racism to identity politics, to cancel culture. The action never leaves the school: we don’t learn where Carla lives, or what kind of town this is, but this is compensated for by an increasingly claustrophobic vibe which constantly ratchets up the dramatic tension, until the slightly underwhelming finale. Nevertheless, it’s an example of cinema being used to prise open the fault-lines in German society. The heightened tensions amongst the teachers felt redolent of Germany’s angst around the issues of both Russia/ Ukraine and Palestine, cleft sticks where either action or inaction only seem to makes matter worse, and every tiny conflict becomes exacerbated until it has blown up into a full-scale crisis. Who will benefit from this rarified chaos? Clearly not the well-meaning teachers, as the film makes clear. The well-intentioned, naive Carla just keeps making things worse, the more she tries to right the reeling boat. 

Friday 26 April 2024

close up (w&d abbas kiarostami)

The playful intellectualism of Iranian cinema seems to have echoes in the mind games of Rio Plantense cinema. This is what happens when you yoke cerebral educated filmmakers who don’t have a capitalist imperative to the artform. See also Communist era Poland.  There’s something Borgesian about Close-Up, with its imagined film within a film and its impersonating director. But there’s also a tragic social history there, as the impersonator, Hossain Sabzian, a film lover with no hope of ever making a film, indulges his Walter Mitty life for a while. Sabzian is so disarmingly charming and unassuming, playing himself in the movie, that you cannot help but root for him. The humanism that underpins Kiarostami’s vision is also indicative of Iranian cinema’s progressive agenda, which seems so little in keeping with the country’s official or apparent politics over the course of the last thirty years. In addition, the very fact that Sabzian’s fraud is constructed around the fame of a director speaks of a society that  values cinema in a way that the West does not. Even our most famous directors, the likes of Nolan, Mendes or Macqueen, are unlikely to be recognised in the improbable event they decided to go rogue and travel on public transport. 

Wednesday 24 April 2024

the woman in the dunes (d. hiroshi teshigahara, w. kôbô abe, eiko yoshida)

Curry and I went to see this at the NFT all those years ago. No idea why we chose to go, a blind whim, or perhaps he had done his research. It was, in its way, a revelatory viewing experience which shaped our thinking on The Boat People just as much as Cortazar & co. Little did we realise, cinema ingenues that we were back then, that no-one in the UK was either going to be interested or impressed by a film referencing Teshigahara. As ever, it was a trip returning to see a film that has lingered in the memory over the course of twenty years. The near sadistic brilliance hasn’t waned a bit. I couldn’t help thinking about what the cast and crew must have gone through to film in this relentless jungle of sand. An almost Herzogian process. In many ways this is a classic horror movie. Man who is hoodwinked by callous locals, held captive against his will, starved and brought to the edge of sanity through thirst, flees only to get caught in quicksand. And yet, as the title suggests, it is also a warped love story, of the kind that appears to recur so frequently in Japanese culture.