Whenever I hear
people dismiss movies as “fantasy” and make a hard distinction between film and
life, I think to myself that it’s just a way of avoiding the power of cinema.
Of course it’s not life—it’s the invocation of life, it’s in an ongoing
dialogue with life. Martin Scorsese *
Voila a heartfelt explanation about the pull of movies. I have been coming to the Berlin Film
Festival since 1985, and every year I land at Tegel airport with the same sense
of excitement. Politics, history, the
state of European affairs, friendships, have always been ingredients in the
mix. But the lure of flickering lights in the darkness of a theater has never
abated.
This giant beanstalk growing into the February skies of a big
city has already taken me to intriguing places, worlds and characters that I
have enjoyed exploring, mightily enhanced by that library of Alexandria called
the IPad.
A few thought about the films in competition.
Providing the star wattage for the red carpet of the opening
night on February 7 was the quirky Wes Anderson’s historical fantasy The Grand Budapest Hotel. Recreating the
Mitteleuropa of Berlin, Vienna and Prague, that nourished the filmmakers,
painters, composers that we teach in film classes – Herr Lubitsch in Hollywood,
then Ophuls and Wilder and those exiles in Los Angeles – Anderson finds
inspiration in Stefan Zweig. A Proust
moment for me, because my grandmother loved the work of this Austrian; and I
remember vividly her discussing his memoir, The World of Yesterday
(1942), about the collapse of a cultural and artistic mindset. The Grand Budapest Hotel is both a wink
to the shipwreck of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the winds of two wars (yes,
all stereotypes are there) and a valentine to classical Hollywood. But the
sensibility –the mix and match, the plot, the visual style, the exaggerations –
is post-modern and a tad obvious. Wes Anderson can only recreate the world of
Central Europe Lubistch so lovingly replicated in the Los Angeles lots. Or to
say it differently, the sets of The Shop around the Corner look more Hungarian
than the production design possibilities offered by Babelsberg, the former UFA
studios south of Berlin. The movie
provides for a thoroughly enjoyable experience.
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* Martin Scorsese, “The Persisting Vision: Reading the Language
of Cinema”, The New York Review of Book, 15 August 2013. I’ve uploaded it on my class website, http://www.csun.edu/~med61203/
______________
On German styles
Quite a splash – on a formal and thematic level – was
created by Kreuzweg (Via Crucis) an
austere theological drama directed by Dietrich Bruggemann and co-written with
his sister Anna. The filmmaker and his
sibling – young, blond, on the casual side of things – came up with a stunning
piece of filmmaking, probing a radical understanding of sacrifice and the
communion of saints within a Catholic frame of reference. Out of left field. Like Kieslowski’s modern-day take on the Ten
Commandments, the Bruggemann siblings link the 14 Stations of the Cross – a
particularly Catholic and moving Holy Week tradition reliving Our Lord’s
journey to a criminal’s death – to a modern day young girl’s decision to offer
her life so that her baby brother can be cured.
Each of the stations is one long take, some fifteen minutes
long, and all except three with a stationary camera. In the meticulously staged movement of the
characters – driving a car, at the dinner table, in a doctor’s office, a church
and a hospital – the film lays out the theological groundwork in the form of exacting
conversations between the protagonist - aptly or obviously named Maria – and
the priest preparing her for Confirmation (Florian Stetter, the Schiller of Beloved Sisters) and her iron-steeled mother. Operating from fundamentalist premises, these
two figures of authority are gauging a battle for the soul of a kid who longs
for beauty and goodness and is struggling to get there.
The correspondence between the suffering of Christ and the Via
Dolorosa of this young girl is made terrifyingly explicit in the titles of each
episode. Bresson’s Diary of a Country Priest becomes an indispensable reference since the
literary original and the film adaptation are also examining questions of mercy
and grace – the two unspoken issues at play in Kreuzweg – none of which grows in the hearts of the adult
antagonists, who live their faith from an arid platform of duty. Unlike Bunuel, who went for the jugular in Nazarin, showing how a Christian living
the Gospel to the extreme should behave, Kreuzweg
describes how the lack of radical joy and openness to the other – the message perhaps that most identifies
Cardinal Bergoglio since becoming Pope Francis last March - leads to spiritual
starvation.
What is a fecund way to live the faith, the Bruggemann
siblings seem to be asking when all has come to an end. Their response is theologically opaque; no
hopeful plunge into “Tout est grace”,
like Diary of a Country Priest. And from a cinematographic viewpoint, the
Bruggemanns also look through a glass, darkly: a slow crane shot rises to a gray sky from the
tomb where Maria has been laid to rest.
A hint, perhaps, that the sacrifice has been accepted and the mysterious
workings of grace have saved the soul. In the upward mobility of the camera may
be hidden the response.
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