Tuesday, February 16, 2016

"Death in Sarajevo" and "Fire on the Sea": two sides of the European coin

Two films in the Competition section of this year’s Berlinale offer an interesting exploration, explicit and tacit, about the state of Europe today.  This may sound grandiloquent, even farfetched, but viewing them back to back made for an intriguing comparison.

 Director Danis Tannic
Death in Sarajevo, a Bosnian French production directed by Danis Tanovic, whose Neorealist-style drama An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker won the jury and actor prize at the 2013 Berlinale, is a breezily laid out exploration of the political fate of the Balkans since the summer of 1914, when the assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire plunged Europe into a brutal war, until the equally bloody breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The film posits the Balkans as a synecdoche for Europe, and a summery of its current state of affairs. Building on a play by the French philosopher and media celebrity Bernard-Henri Lévy, the symbolically titled Hotel Europe, Tanovic wrote a screenplay developing the external events and characters orbiting around the central event of the play – an actor rehearsing a monologue in a Sarajevo hotel.  

Philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy
This Bosnian French production follows the three rules of classic theater: unity of action, location and time. It’s a tour de force, like Victoria, a Berlinale entry last year, made up of one long take unfolding in real time.  In Death in Sarajevo, long takes prevail, with the camera trailing in and out of corridors, offices, kitchen and dining rooms behind the key players, in a show of Birdman’s dexterity (This is the new international film style).  Several crises unfold in the labyrinth of the hotel (a piece of Socialist architecture in downtown Sarajevo), two of which frame the politics of the film. One is the making of a news show in the terrace where a sharp Bosnian reporter is talking to historians about the events of 1914 on a location right below them, and the radicalized Gavrilo Princip  – a hero or a terrorist? – whose two pistol shots triggered WWI.  The second is the original play by Lévy, in which a French actor rehearsing his monologue, an argument about 20th century Europe beginning and ending in Sarajevo. 

These and other story strands – the calling of a strike by the employees, who have not been paid for a while, since the hotel is on the brink of bankruptcy; a mother-daughter relationship; the thugs running a strip club in the basement; a wife pestering a coke-snorting policeman to buy a couch  - come together in the climax sequence outside of an elevator.  It is a key moment that simultaneously replicates and turns upside down the 1914 assassination and its meanings. It makes the audience ponder the fateful chain of events deriving from the two bullets, and what would have happened if chance had played its cards differently: the open car driving the heir and his wife made a wrong turn after having escaped a failed assassination attempt earlier.

Tightly edited, with strong performances and nimble camera work, Death in Sarajevo is a thought-provoking film that shows the Europe of 1914 not so different from that of today, torn by conflicts where politics and religion are interwoven . (I think a viable literary analogy is Michel Houellebecq’s 2015 novel Soumission).  There might be no single event today capable of triggering its collapse, like the bullets of the Bosnian Serb Princip. But the parallels and questions – as laid out in the Lévy play and born out by the events of the film – are worth examining in light of Europe’s current state of affairs.

An intriguing counterpoint to Death in Sarajevo is Fuocoammare/Fire on the Sea, an Italian documentary directed by Gianfranco Rosi.  Eschewing narrator and exposition, except for a brief written preface, the film shows how migrants crossing the Mediterranean from Africa, at immense peril, reach the island of Lampedusa (population 6,000) in Southern Italy.  This is the first of two stories and has the looks of a procedural documentary – à la Frederick Wiseman – with the camera following the Italian authorities dealing with the crisis at sea, the migrants themselves traveling in harrowing conditions, and the administrative processing of the survivors.  The second strand, along the lines of La terra trema’s Neorealism, quietly follows the lives of the folks of Lampedusa: a DJ taking calls on radio, two elderly couples cooking, cleaning and eating, and a lively ten-year old kid, Emmanuele, who roams the island with slingshots, b.b. guns, learning to become a fisherman, the centuries-old occupation of the islanders.

The young protagonist
The two story lines run on parallel tracks, and do not connect, except for the symbolism we can read in the patch the kid is prescribed to stimulate his lazy eye. (It was a fortuitous metaphor, the director noted in the press conference).  The only other link is the island’s doctor, whom we see tending to a migrant pregnant woman, and also the little boy, suffering from anxiety.  The physician describes the lethal dangers of crossing the sea– oil burns, dehydration, drowning – in a heart-wrenching monologue to the camera (“no matter how many times you see dead children, you still feel the hole in your stomach”).  As an expository narrator at that point, he carries the moral conscience of the film.  The doctor came to Berlin and in the press conference pointed out the solidarity of Lampedusa with the waves of migrants.  He must have sensed the objection of many journalists, disturbed by the two-track story, where it is possible to read the Lampedusans as indifferent to this ongoing tragedy.

Gianfranco Rosi
An Italian colleague pointed out that a recent documentary on the subject, Lampedusa in Winter (2015), shown at Locarno last summer, succeeds in rendering a clearer picture of this catastrophe.  The first official visit of Pope Francis was to Lampedusa in July 2013, a cri-de-coeur that had a profound media impact.


Death in Sarajevo and Fire on the Sea reminded me in different ways about the soul of Europe today.  On my way to the Berlinale from the hotel these past days, I walk by a building on Stressemann Strasse that has been reconditioned to host Syrian refugees.  The words of Chancellor Merkel resonate in Berlin: ‘We can do it’.

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