Saturday, January 27, 2024

Afire (Roter Himmel)


 
























Writer/director Christian Petzold



Silver Bear Award at Berlin

cinematographer Hans Fromm setting the shot

Petzold on the set









































AFIRE (Roter Himmel)                      B+                                                                                  Germany  (102 mi)  2023  d: Christian Petzold

Every day at eventide                                                                                                                  The sultan’s daughter fair                                                                                                               Wandered by the fountain                                                                                                              Where the white water purls

Every day at eventide                                                                                                                   The young slave stood by the fountain                                                                                           Where the white water purls                                                                                                          And every day his face grew paler

Then one evening the princess                                                                                          Approached him and suddenly spoke:                                                                                       “Your name I wish to know,                                                                                                           Your homeland and your tribe.”

Said the slave, “My name                                                                                                                 Is Mohamet, I come from Yemen                                                                                                      And my tribe is the Asra                                                                                                                  Who perish when they love.”

—Heinrich Heine, Der Asra (L’Asra), 1846

Winner of the Silver Bear Prize (2nd Place) at the 2023 Berlin Film Festival, German director Christian Petzold has a tendency to make surgically precise, pensively brooding films that linger long afterwards, like 2015 Top Ten List # 3 Phoenix, and 2018 Top Ten List #3 Transit, heavy historical films with contemporary implications, but this more lighthearted film is a first for him, and might even be described as a black comedy, as it similarly explores the dark mysteries of the human condition by showcasing how ridiculously blind and delusional we tend to be in pursuit of our own short-sided agendas.  Petzold was isolated with Covid at the outbreak of the pandemic, leaving him plenty of time to binge-watch the films of Éric Rohmer, as a box set of 25 films was gifted to him by Margaret Ménégoz from Les Films du Losange, his French distributor co-founded by Rohmer in 1962, while also reading Chekhov’s An Artist's Story, and any number of French and American “summer films,” which motivated him to make a series of doomed love stories loosely inspired by the classical elements of water, earth, fire, and air, starting a German Romanticism trilogy with 2020 Top Ten List #6 Undine, an allegorical tale of an elusive water nymph, while this film uses a fire motif that alerts us to catastrophic danger, yet people blithely overlook the possibilities, never even changing their normal routines until forced to do so, becoming a critique of bourgeois self-obsession.  Due to pandemic restrictions, Petzold was forced to deviate from his familiar shooting style, using a small crew and just a few actors while staging this film quite differently, unable to show the physical presence of bodies during sex (sound replaces what we normally see), yet there’s plenty of fun to be had in this mesmerizing standoff between love and nature, while also chock full of surprises that may catch viewers off-guard, with plenty of misunderstandings, embarrassments, and humiliation in this quietly atmospheric study of artistic isolation and ego.  The ambiguity that pervades throughout this slow comedy of manners is most intriguing, where you keep waiting for something to happen, with Petzold literally toying with the audience, and nothing turns out the way you expect.  This is a deliriously existential tale told through the perspective of one of the characters, Leon (Thomas Schubert), an unlikeable Fassbinder style protagonist (even bearing a slight resemblance), a one-time successful writer who is having trouble with his second book, satirically entitled Club Sandwich (recalling Charles Bukowski’s Ham on Rye), facing an artistic crisis when he retreats from Berlin to the tranquility of a vacation home in Ahrenshoop on the coast of the Baltic Sea in the former GDR with his friend Felix (Langston Uibel).  A deeply reflective film divided between desire and reason, symbolism and realism, comedy and tragedy, certainly one of the fascinating aspects is the dreamlike opening music (“Love’s gonna make us blind”) from Austrian siblings known as Wallners that bookends the film, lulling viewers into a false sense of security as they drive through the forest to get to the sea, WALLNERS // IN MY MIND (Official Video) - Vimeo (4:12), and while the beauty of the natural landscape is intoxicating, there is a sudden jolt of silence and disappointment when the car breaks down miles from their destination, stopped dead in their tracks in an isolated forested area with no cellphone reception, yet Felix believes he knows a shortcut through the woods to his family’s summer cottage.  With Leon left alone with the eerie sounds of nature, we’re immediately attuned to feelings of dread, as any number of possibilities might spark disaster in a horror film, beautifully captured by Petzold’s longtime cinematographer Hans Fromm, literally soaked in poetic realism, yet the first order of business is making a mental adjustment, as all is not what it seems, though every moment feels like a constant discovery.  Like Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple, a dark cloud follows the grumpy Leon wherever he goes, constantly annoyed, always finding something to whine about even in the best of times, a seriously repressed, high maintenance guy stuck in his own head who believes his opportunities are being swept away.  Finding himself on the outside looking in, like a distant and detached observer, he literally shuns the world around him, which allows us to see him through the perspective of others, while Felix, ever the optimist and openly expressive, has a completely different outlook, seen patiently saving the day, but they are both exhausted hauling all their luggage in the dark the rest of the way.   

More surprises await them, as dirty dishes, half-eaten food, an unmade bed, and empty wine glasses greet them upon their arrival, so the house already has a guest, retreating into a spare bedroom only to be awakened in the middle of the night from the relentless sounds of sex coming from an adjoining room, driving Leon outside, sleeping under the stars, where he’s forced to contend with pesky mosquitoes.  So the lay of the land is not ideal, as apparently they’ll be sharing the retreat with a stranger who’s already nabbed the larger room, someone they’ve heard but not yet seen, only catching a glimpse of her before she dashes off on her bicycle the next morning, finally allowing Leon some peace and quiet, choosing the garden gazebo as a place to write, while Felix heads off to the beach for a swim, which is just a short distance away through the woods.  Of course, Leon inevitably gets sidetracked, not really in the mood to write, so instead he stupidly throws a tennis ball off the walls of the house as a means to pass the time before scrounging around in the other guest’s room, searching for clues, listening to their music, before absurdly racing back to his laptop computer when he hears Felix returning to make it look like he’s seriously lost in thought.  The stage is set, as Leon is a snobbish, self-absorbed artist who thinks only of himself, as if art is only attainable for the fortunate few, while Felix, an aspiring photographer himself, is extraordinarily accommodating, where they are at opposite ends of the spectrum.  Add to the mix Nadja (Paula Beer in another one of her woman of mystery roles making her third film with Petzold), an upbeat and intelligent woman living the weightless summer fantasy who sells ice cream out of a cart in town but wants to make amends for the nocturnal inconvenience by inviting them both for dinner, joining her current boyfriend Devid (Enno Trebs), who is a lifeguard at the beach, though he prefers “rescue swimmer.”  Both Leon and Felix happened to run into him at his beachside post earlier in the day, but only Felix spent any time getting to know him, with Leon playing the part of a tormented artist, dressed entirely in black, including long sleeves, standing out from everybody else, brazenly calling attention to himself, as he hates the beach and anything connected to physical activity, while the more jovial Felix was completely relaxed and ready to enjoy the sea, spending much of his time assembling photographic material for admission into a prestigious Berlin art school.  As in Rohmer’s PAULINE ON THE BEACH (1983) or A Summer's Tale (Conte d'été) (1996), mood and conversations are cheerful, as the dinner out under the open sky has an idyllic nature to it, with Devid providing a long-winded narration that has Nadja beaming with delight, while Leon looks bored, as if he couldn’t care less, but the heightened interest in the story catches both men off-guard, as the carefully calculated payoff turns into an opportunity for a quick kiss with Felix, which is completely unexpected, yet the whole point of it all.  Leon is literally sneering with arrogant disdain, believing he is intellectually superior, wondering why he is wasting his time instead of working on his book, condescendingly looking down on them as if they hardly matter at all, exhibiting paternalistic derision, while at the same time he is interested in and completely distracted by Nadja, but is unable to express his feelings, remaining shy and overly wary.  Petzold has a history as a provocateur, intentionally stirring things up, and with Leon he’s created a loathsome and unsympathetic character, continually seen sulking, looking for all the world like a hypocrite, yet he’s the one carrying the story, hilariously missing everything that’s happening all around him.  In what appears to be a fitting tribute to Sofia Coppola, Petzold alters his style, where it seems like nothing of any consequence is happening, yet a different kind of language is being communicated by subdued emotions, simple gestures, and furtive eye contact, where a wordless chamber drama is taking place before our eyes using only the subtlest of details, a subconscious reality that remains an enigma for viewers, like a puzzle that needs to be assembled, creating an unforgettable film about smoldering love, longing, and transience.    

None of them feel threatened by the sheer size of a growing forest fire that is alarming, as the wind direction away from the water makes them believe they are safe, yet they can see the red sky off in the distance, with the constant drone of helicopters buzzing past carrying loads of water.  The Autobahn is closed nearby, some resort towns have already been evacuated, with panic and alarm dominating the news reports, but not for this motley crew.  The unhurried pace of the film is typical of Rohmer’s style, where the formation of casual relationships takes center stage, accentuating the interpersonal in a beachside setting that allows for a summertime fantasy escape from the problems of the real world.  What’s so amusing is Leon’s response to this idyllic getaway, as whenever he’s invited to go for a swim with the others at the beach, he shows little curiosity and refuses to have a good time, where his standard answer is “My work won’t allow it,” which even he finds ridiculous, where the more obnoxious he acts, the more he despises himself, but it’s part of his act as a supposed serious writer to be socially aloof and pretentiously evasive, with no time for anyone, obsessed only with his own talent.  When Nadja offers to read his manuscript, he quickly rejects her, but seeing her disenchanted reaction to his dismissiveness, has second thoughts, plagued by self-doubt, growing ever more desperate and unsure.  When she decides to read it right there on the spot, he looks like a lost puppy waiting to be reunited with its owner, fidgeting around the grounds in sheer discomfort.  But when she renders her verdict that it’s positively dreadful, the decisiveness leaves him cold, deciding she’s only an ice cream vendor.  What does she know?  The real verdict will come from his editor, Helmut (Matthias Brandt), and he’s twisted himself into knots in anticipation of his expected arrival, where they plan to spend the weekend going over his manuscript together, placing great importance on the outcome.  When Helmut finally arrives he can only spend the night, and rather than go to a restaurant in town, he’d prefer to have dinner with the collected group, which infuriates Leon, having so little time, wanting him all to himself.  The theatrical nature of the dinner is a thing of beauty, as Helmut takes serious interest in everyone’s artistic ambitions except Leon, who he religiously avoids, leaving him silently fuming in disgust.  One by one he explores both Felix and Nadja’s projects that they’re working on, offering genuine interest and positive feedback, especially for Nadja’s Doctoral interest in German poet Heinrich Heine (Heinrich Heine: A Life of Contradictions), a contemporary of musicians Robert Schumann and Franz Schubert whose poetry was used as lyrics for German Lieder.  Steeped in his typical formal precision, Petzold, who was trained as a literary scholar, similarly draws from earlier artworks to transform his own, exploring the possibilities of his own perspective, where the film is a testament that art is not the purview of some exclusive club, available only for the serious-minded, but is a human activity that is moved precisely by the artist’s ability to connect with others, to touch the heart, where the big questions of life can be found in the most unspectacular moments and encounters.  The jaw-dropping scene of the film is the discovery that Nadja is not just a seasonal worker but a literary scholar as she recites one of Heine’s poems from memory about a tribe “who perish when they love,” a deeply moving moment that simply dumbfounds Leon by adding a touch of literary intellectualism, never seeing that coming, suddenly realizing he’s not the most impressive intellect of the group, making him feel terribly small, as if crushed like a bug.  What elevates this film is a sudden change in tone that comes late, with a glorious nighttime phenomenon of bioluminescence on the water when “the sea shines” that references Rohmer’s Le Rayon Vert (Summer) (1986), veering into unexplored territory that beautifully mixes dark humor with full-blown tragedy, where Leon is simply befuddled by it all, experiencing his own existential transformation that comes out of nowhere, with viewers similarly emerging regenerated, with the film projecting into our own interiority and sensitivity to the world.  When ash finally falls from the sky like heavy snowflakes, it’s one of the most gorgeous shots of the film, while the flames on the horizon that had always felt like a metaphor for desire, seemingly so far away, suddenly draw near, as the rhythm, tone, and genre of the film are completely transformed with dizzying speed, becoming a hauntingly intense and complex experience that will leave viewers flummoxed.  

Christian Petzold's Closet Picks Criterion picks, YouTube (5:08) 

Monday, January 22, 2024

Fallen Leaves (Kuolleet lehdet)


 














Writer/director Aki Kaurismäki

The director with his dogs

The director with his lead actors

The director on the red carpet at Cannes
















 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FALLEN LEAVES (Kuolleet lehdet)          B+                                                                          Finland  Germany  (81 mi)  2023  d: Aki Kaurismäki

I’m imprisioned here forever                                                                                                  Fences surround the graveyard too                                                                                               When my last earthly task is finally done                                                                                      You’ll still dig me deeper into the ground.

—Maustetytöt, Syntynyt Suruun Ja Puettu Pettymyksin (Born Of Sorrow And Clothed With Disappointments)

A throwback to the Aki Kaurismäki of old, this is an exaggerated working class romance fantasy that accentuates “the Finnish reality” of making the best out of a wretchedly miserable situation, a laughable alternative to Candide’s “the best of all possible worlds,” yet both Voltaire and Kaurismäki sympathetically accentuate the best humanist traditions, with Kaurismäki portraying down-on-their-luck individuals driven to outrageous acts by an oppressive society, becoming dark comedies that are characterized by laconic humor, drinking, detached irony, and smoking.  Centered in an industrial section of the Finnish capital of Helsinki, the grimness of his protagonist’s lives are deeply entrenched in a social realist cityscape that offers a dreamlike avenue of escape through a redemptive power of love.  Deeply cynical and darkly comedic, this director makes the most out of so little, where his minimalist style uses succinct and extremely well-chosen staccato language that plays out like a haiku poem, with no rehearsals and usually only one take, evoking the visual precision of Bresson and the gritty tone of Fassbinder.  Pre-occupied with working class loners encumbered by soulless jobs in bleak surroundings, they express a marked disdain for rigid authoritarian rules, where preserving one’s dignity feels paramount, typically finding refuge in dive bars, where drinking is man’s last salvation, viewed as an almost heroic retreat from the blistering conformity of their lives, where rock ‘n’ roll music provides the sardonic tone of absurdity necessary to survive the eternal gloom that permeates such an enveloping wasteland where the future always looks grim.  Premiering at Cannes where it won the Jury Prize (3rd Place), easily the shortest of all the films in competition, while also listed in the Top Ten of Cahiers du Cinéma, Film Comment, IndieWire, Time, Atlantic, Ringer, Slant, and John Waters, Movies - Year-End Lists, it is heralded as the 4th film in his earlier Proletariat Trilogy, SHADOWS IN PARADISE (1986), Ariel (1988), and THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL (1990), though it could just as easily fit into his Helsinki Trilogy, seemingly having more in common with DRIFTING CLOUDS (1996), as it navigates the debilitating despair and insurmountable hopelessness that comes from searching for happiness in low-wage, dead-end jobs that offer no benefits or job security.  Featuring two new actors who have never worked with this director before, they are new faces gracing the screen, yet both exhibit that deadpan comic timing which is an essential component of any Kaurismäki film, where an outlandish Kafkaesque absurdity drives the film with the precision of Samuel Beckett one-liners.  The sometimes shy and other times emboldened Ansa (Alma Pöysti) works a mindlessly repetitive job at a grocery store while the disillusioned yet ever stoic Holappa (Jussi Vatanen) is a construction worker who is seemingly inseparable from a hidden bottle of booze, a predominate theme in Kaurismäki movies, coming from a place where heavy alcohol consumption is such an entrenched part of the culture.  With documentary style precision of their respective workplaces, their dreary lives meet in a karaoke bar, each accompanied by their one and only friend, Liisa (Nuppu Koivu) and Huotari (Janne Hyytiäinen), yet the raw, pulsating rhythm from 1974 - Hurriganes Get On YouTube (3:44) announces that we’re in for a wild ride, as it lures viewers into the mindset, setting the tone for what follows.  You haven’t lived, apparently, until you’ve heard the enduring popularity of Mambo italiano YouTube (2:40) sung in Finnish.

The most-watched domestic film of the year in Finland, a first for this director, part of what makes it so special is the director’s unique ability to capture palpable modern emotions via silence and expressions rather than words, very much resembling silent films, where everyday details register as grand, meaningful cinematic gestures, while his unorthodox, jukebox soundtrack fills the screen with humorous asides that bring irony to the next level.  The maker of La Vie de Bohème (The Bohemian Life) (1992), Lights in the Dusk (Laitakaupungin Valot) (2006), Le Havre (2011), and The Other Side of Hope (Toivon tuolla puolen) (2017), though for my money it’s hard to top Take Care of Your Scarf, Tatjana (Pidä huivista kiinni, Tatjana) (1994), Kaurismäki is a director who takes great pleasure in filming outcasts on the fringe of society, where what stands out in each of his films is the disintegration of the working class and thwarted social advancement, shattering all aspirations for a better life, where exploitation in the workplace is the norm, leaving characters stuck in an indifferent world from which there is no escape.  Gloominess and romance typically do not mix, yet here they merge to a surprisingly comical and heartfelt effect, as both characters clearly have some sort of baggage, yet the film moves along at a snappy pace even with long scenes where the camera barely moves, giving the film a simplicity and lightheartedness which elevates it into a rare form of cinematic treasure that simply can’t be found elsewhere.  Adding to the oppressive tone are the recurring radio broadcasts of the Russian invasion of Ukraine heard on old-school radios in their homes, relying upon news reports by radio instead of television, where the monotonous nature of these messages act as historical time capsules that you immediately want to tune out, reflecting just how ordinary this worldwide calamity has become on the modern landscape, affecting people all over the world.  Let’s not forget Finland is on Russia’s border, where Putin’s troops are never far away.  Triggered by the aggression, Finland joined the NATO military alliance immediately after the invasion, while it’s important to recall that Kaurismäki once boycotted the Oscars in protest of the Iraq war.  Yet, as Susan Sontag suggests in her 2003 book-length essay, REGARDING THE PAIN OF OTHERS Susan Sontag, people can become unresponsive to horror, even though thousands of families have lost their loved ones and their possessions forever.  Making matters worse, both characters keep losing their jobs, which is another everyday reality they have to contend with, where money is scarce, so both keep their emotions tightly in check, never knowing what tomorrow will bring.  Both appear to be diligent workers, hardly the troublemakers they are made out to be by overzealous employers, though drinking while operating heavy machinery does present definite problems, especially when management couldn’t care less about faulty equipment.  What Kaurismäki has done is craft a storyline where, through a series of mishaps, both characters find each other and lose each other and then find each other and lose each other again, both physically and emotionally, where the struggle to stay afloat resembles the sardonic tone of Roy Andersson’s existential parables in his Living Trilogy, SONGS FROM THE SECOND FLOOR (2000), YOU, THE LIVING (2007), and A Pigeon Sat On a Branch Reflecting On Existence (En duva satt på en gren och funderade på tillvaron) (2014), yet also About Endlessness (Om det oändliga) (2019).  Kaurismäki predates Andersson, but both are in the same mold of bone-dry Nordic humor.

Holappa: I’m depressed
Huotari: Why?
Holappa: Because I drink
Huotari: Why do you drink?
Holappa: Because I’m depressed

Their first date is memorable, with Kaurismäki paying homage to his beloved cinema, as there are movie references everywhere you look.  Taking place in a sparsely populated arthouse theater, they attend a screening of Jim Jarmusch’s absurdist apocalyptic zombie movie The Dead Don't Die (2019), where one older patron hilariously explains afterwards that it reminded him of Bresson’s Diary of a Country Priest (Journal d'un curé de campagne) (1951), while another mentioned Godard’s Band of Outsiders (Bande à Part) (1964).  A prominently placed poster for Luchino Visconti’s Rocco and His Brothers (1960) is featured in a bar, while inside the theater posters are seen for Bresson’s L'Argent (1983) and Jean-Pierre Melville’s LE SAMOURAÏ (1967).  Outside the theater we see Finnish movie posters of David Lean’s BRIEF ENCOUNTER (1945), Sam Newfield’s LOST CONTINENT (1951), Godard’s Contempt (Le Mépris) (1963) and Pierrot le Fou (1965), something of a movie lover’s dream, FALLEN LEAVES Clip | TIFF 2023 YouTube (1:23), where you’ve got to love that rush of romantic strings from Tchaikovsky’s 6th Symphony, a sure sign of romance ahead.  While Ansa has a first generation Nokia flip phone, he has none, or even a permanent address, so she writes her phone number on paper, which he promptly loses, leaving him in limbo trying to find her afterwards, which is reflected not only in their disconnect from the conveniences of modern electronics, but in the bare furnishings and rather dated furniture of their apartments as well, perfectly captured in a hilarious moment when Ansa receives her electric bill in the mail.  Alienated from themselves and each other, there are so many awkward looks in this film, where characters seemingly have nothing to say, with a camera lingering to prolong the discomfort, yet that karaoke bar is filled with a stream of witty, lyrical references from the lush romanticism of Schubert’s lieder, Jussi Björling; "Ständchen" - Franz Schubert - YouTube (5:03), which is actually sung by Mika Nikander, a bass who has performed with the Finnish National Opera, to the chilly expressionless performance style of the platinum-blonde Finnish sister duo Maustetytöt - Syntynyt suruun ja puettu pettymyksin (Live 2020 ... YouTube (4:09).  Especially in context with such a heavy theme, where the weight of the world is on their shoulders, this film can feel rejuvenating in spirit, so authentically complex and intelligently composed, yet filled with funny gags, including a cameo appearance by longtime regular Sakari Kuosmanen, offering a sweetness and tenderness in the face of so many obstacles in their path, where the director’s own dog captures our collective hearts at the end.  There is no lack of irony with Kaurismäki, where a constant Brechtian estrangement, together with very rigorous compositions of predominantly static shots and a 35 mm cinematography with clear and particularly saturated colors, contributes to a grotesque and surreal character.  Yet, at the same time, there is also a crude social criticism concerning not only the dehumanization of work, but also the transience of life in a world in where just a small gust of wind could drastically change things.  The evocative imagery and pronounced symbolism from longtime cinematographer Timo Salminen is particularly effective, especially an early shot of Holappa looking at himself in front of a broken mirror that condenses the jagged look of a man with a broken identity into a single image.  Few filmmakers have achieved a style so personal and so immediately recognizable, providing an extremely concise style of filmmaking with an elegant structure that manages to touch viewers in familiar yet also unexpected ways, subverting the Boy Meets Girl narrative that we’ve seen so many times, so far outside the Hollywood mold, yet the final shot is an enduring tribute to Chaplin.