Showing posts with label amnesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amnesia. Show all posts

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Coming Home (Gui Lai)
















COMING HOME (Gui Lai)               B                    
China  (109 mi)  2014  ‘Scope  d:  Zhang Yimou                   Official site [Japan]

An old-fashioned, Hollywood melodrama in the traditional sense, where the strength of the film comes from the powerful performances, reuniting Fifth Generation director Zhang Yimou with celebrated actress Gong Li for the 8th time where together they produced a series of lavish, highly colorful period melodramas in the 90’s starring his then partner Gong Li in RED SORGHUM (1987), JU DOU (1990), RAISE THE RED LANTERN (1991), TO LIVE (1994), and SHANGHAI TRIAD (1995).  It’s been nearly 40-years since the Cultural Revolution ended in 1976, and 20-years since the director’s film TO LIVE was banned at home in China after winning the Jury Prize at Cannes and Best Actor for Ge You.  Since that time, Zhang Yimou has gone from being a political outcast, straddling the line with authorities, where he was recently forced to pay over a million dollar fine for violating the country’s one-child policy (where he allegedly fathered 7 children with 4 women), to the heralded genius behind the dazzling opening and closing ceremonies at the Beijing Olympics in 2008, where his choreography of a cast of thousands was nothing less than spectacular.  No longer the innovative visual stylist of his youth when his early films were banned in China until he made a Party-approved film on a contemporary theme, THE STORY OF QIU JU (1992), Zhang Yimou, in the eyes of some, capitulated to Party authorities and has become more of a master craftsman, defined by his ability to bring organization to the chaos of the collective, directing his re-imagined production of Turandot, Puccini’s most exotic opera set in ancient China, staged at the Forbidden City in Beijing in 1998, which becomes even more daring and visually explosive under his direction, before touring the world after the Olympics in 2009-10 with his reprised version, staging a ballet version of RAISE THE RED LANTERN in 2001, while also leading the production of contemporary Chinese composer Tan Dun’s opera The First Emperor that had its premiere at the New York Metropolitan Opera in 2006.  Adapting Yan Geling’s novel The Criminal Lu Yanshi, herself a dancer at age 12 in the People’s Liberation Army during the Cultural Revolution, an author who received her master’s in Fine Arts Fiction Writing at Columbia College in Chicago, it’s a film that looks back at the crimes of the Cultural Revolution with a spirit of haunting resignation, where one character can be heard saying, “It’s all right, it’s in the past now,” reminiscent of the memorable final line from Roman Polanski’s CHINATOWN (1974), “Forget it, Jake, it’s Chinatown.”  Few Chinese films have addressed what actually happened during the Cultural Revolution, which remains a sticky subject with government censors, and those directors that did, such as Sixth Generation filmmaker Wang Xiaoshuai’s Cultural Revolution Trilogy of SHANGHAI DREAMS (2005), 11 FLOWERS (2011), and RED AMNESIA (2015), did so with official permission, as lacking that authority led him to be officially blacklisted early in his career, while director Tian Zhuangzhuang received a 10-year ban from making films for his blistering critique of the government’s practices during the Hundred Flowers Campaign, the Anti-Rightist Movement, the Great Leap Forward, leading up to the Cultural Revolution in THE BLUE KITE (1993), an extraordinary film that remains banned to this day.  Like Tian’s family, whose father was head of the Beijing Film Studio while his mother ran the Beijing Children’s Film Studio, Zhang Yimou’s parents were similarly persecuted during the Cultural Revolution, with both children being sent to countryside re-education farm labor camps.  Tian Zhuangzhuang comments on the situation in James Berardinelli’s review, Blue Kite, The | Reelviews Movie Reviews:

I finished shooting The Blue Kite in 1992.  But while I was involved in post-production, several official organizations involved with China’s film industry screened the film.  They decided that it had a problem concerning its political ‘leanings,’ and prevented its completion. The fact that it can appear today seems like a miracle... The stories in the film are real, and they are related with total sincerity. What worries me is that it is precisely a fear of reality and sincerity that has led to the ban on such stories being told.

Without providing any backstory, the film opens in the early 70’s with the country still in the midst of the Cultural Revolution, centering on the budding career of Dandan (Zhang Huiwen), a promising dancer in the ballet troupe’s rehearsals for the upcoming revolutionary dance performance of The Red Detachment of Women.  While she is the strongest dancer, she is not chosen for the lead, as her father, intellectual college professor Lu Yanshi (Chen Daoming), was convicted more than a decade ago for being a Rightist (his crime was that he could speak French!) and sent to a labor re-education camp.  Due to that political disgrace, the punishment continues to be passed onto the family.  Fuming at the outcome, Dandan finds little sympathy at home from her school teacher mother Feng Wanyu (Gong Li), who thinks she should be more humble in her ambitions.  Almost immediately, they learn of Lu’s prison escape, where authorities expect him to try to make it home, warning the family of harsh repercussions should they try to shelter him from the police.  Since Dandan barely remembers her father, she’s automatically willing to cooperate, indoctrinated to put party above family, though her mother hesitates at the thought.  It comes as little surprise when he appears like a ghost in the night, eluding the authorities who are hovering nearby, but he’s stymied by a locked door, leaving a note to meet him at the train station.  What follows is a highly choreographed chase sequence on the crowded platforms of the train station where in dizzying fashion that actually grows comical in its stylized, almost slow-motion repetition, Lu attempts to elude the police who have been tipped that he will be waiting there, while Feng frantically tries to warn him of their omnipresence.  All interested parties converge at the same point on a collision course with destiny, as the police push Feng out of the way, bloodying her forehead as they knock her down to grab Lu, overpowering him on the spot as they haul him back to prison.  The film jumps ahead several years, as after Mao’s death, many of the previous convictions were revoked in 1979, as Lu is officially pardoned and released from prison, arriving at the train station where he is met by Dandan, who now lives and works at a textile factory.  No longer welcome in her mother’s home once she learned it was Dandan who betrayed her father by turning him in to the police, selfishly hoping she might regain the lead in the dance company, but that never happened.  When Dandan finally summoned the courage to tell her mother, she’s blindsided by her response, “I’ve cared about no one but you all your life.  It’s time I think about your father.”  While most of this film takes place inside the seemingly cramped apartment of Feng, who lives a claustrophobic, cocoon-like life, the sequences that come alive the most are the impressive dance scenes with Dandan, where Zhang has a unique ability to brilliantly stage artistic performance, expressed with a stunning beauty.  This joyous sense of youthful exhilaration is contrasted by the slow and gentle pace of life from the aging Feng, where Gong Li’s best moments are spent in quiet solitude, exhibiting her own unique sense of rhythm and quiet desperation. 

Much to Lu’s surprise, Feng doesn’t recognize him when he arrives back home, immediately throwing him out, confusing him with someone else who once caused her great harm.  Even the authorities are confused, as they quickly have to find him alternate housing nearby, fixing up an abandoned storage facility.  Watch movies long enough and you’ll become a medical expert on conditions you never knew even existed, as Feng’s condition is described as psychogenic amnesia (Dissociative amnesia), where there is a temporary loss of recall memory anywhere from minutes to years, typically associated with stressful circumstances, usually due to a traumatic event, joining a host of other films that deal with memory loss, from Christopher Nolan’s MEMENTO (2000), displaying a short term memory condition where new memories are never developed, FINDING NEMO (2003), where Dory suffers from short term memory loss, while IRIS (2001), THE NOTEBOOK (2004), Away from Her (2006) and Still Alice (2014) show the devastating progression of memory loss from Alzheimer’s Disease.  While Feng remembers she had a husband, she is unable to recognize Lu, who tries a variety of creative techniques to try to jostle her memory.  With the aid of Dandan, who is herself wracked with guilt from her own involvement, Lu is able to enter her life as a kind and benevolent stranger, arriving at her door as a piano tuner, playing a song that he hoped she would remember, and later becoming the letter reader, as he’s able to read a stack of letters written by her husband but never sent.  While there are moments where it appears they regain the semblance of closeness, it quickly falls apart, leaving nothing short of utter exasperation.  Chen Daoming’s dignity and patience throughout is particularly noteworthy, as he’s stripped of his identity, yet continually reaches out for the woman he tragically spent twenty years separated from while in prison, and is thwarted at every step.  The overwhelming disproportion of his punishment seems absurd, yet that is the film’s only reference to Mao’s Anti-Rightist campaign of the late 50’s purging the intellectual class, remnants of a former society that had to be re-educated to become a useful part of the new collective.  The film completely sidesteps Lu’s alleged crimes and how twenty years of his life were lost for political experimentation, but does show how his family was destroyed in the process, the lingering effects of his punishment passed on to future generations, shifting the focus instead to how he is cleverly able to reunite Feng and Dandan under one roof, but fails in his attempts to be recognized for who he is, as if he remains purged from the past, a ghost that now exists in the collective amnesia of the nation where life goes on. 

The film bears a resemblance to Fassbinder’s THE MARRIAGE OF MARIA BRAUN (1979), especially Feng’s insistence on continually going to the train station to meet her husband, carrying a hand-drawn placard sign so he would recognize her, petrified at the thought of living a life without him, constructing a postwar/post-revolutionary existence that is literally devoid of his spirit, where the heart and soul of her life exists only in memory, which the newly constructed society has little use for once he reappears like a vanished ghost.  Fassbinder, however, dealt with his country’s collective guilt in a much bolder fashion, but the Nazi’s lost the war and their hold on power, requiring the construction of a new German identity.  It’s hard to believe the same film could have been made had the Nazi’s remained in power, a thought that permeates throughout Joshua Oppenheimer’s two bookend films on Indonesian genocide in 1965, The Act of Killing (2012) and THE LOOK OF SILENCE (2014), where the perpetrators of the crime remain in power today by creating a history of lies and distortions about their own culpability, where the past remains in the past, where questions about their role are met with a similar inability to remember, while in China the same monolithic Communist Party of the 1940’s continues to rule in the modern era as well.  The idea of a nation having to learn to live with the horrors and tragedies of the past through a collective amnesia is a bitter pill to swallow and probably makes little sense outside the borders of China.  Within China, however, the film may act as a kind of truth and reconciliation committee, where even if history is forgotten, or the tragic consequences minimized, the associating trauma lingers and is never actually reconciled, where Dandan’s eventual maturity does redeem her actions, becoming a helpful participant in building a newly constructed society, while living in the present requires some kind of benign acceptance with everything that came before, murders, mistakes and all, as China is viewed as one large collective family, where they need to reunite around common goals.  In the West, however, it’s hard to see this, as evidenced by an excerpt from Shelly Kraicer, long-time Beijing resident from Cinema Scope, TIFF 2014 | Coming Home (Zhang Yimou, China) — Special ...

A series of melodramatically heightened scenes, each directed and shot as if it were for a highlight reel, ensue, as does much audience weeping, if the film attains its objective.  Its ideological objective, in this case, is particularly noxious, though not so surprising from an artist who’s given himself so totally over to the Party’s ideological line of the moment.  Here, we are to learn that the true accounting of the crimes buried in our (families’ or nation’s) past(s) is impossible; nevertheless, one must live on, happily, domestically, harmoniously.  How that lesson can be generalized to apply to the Chinese Communist Party and its current subjects is not so much left to as imposed on the viewers.  For an antidote to this depressing line, see Wang Xiaoshuai’s Red Amnesia, also at TIFF, which seems (coincidentally, to be sure) to be conceived as a precise and devastating riposte to Zhang.  In Wang’s vision, the past continues to define the present: a life worth living, for Wang, is predicated exactly on the necessity of acknowledging and accounting for past crimes; past traumas, un-repented, can only haunt and pollute the present.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Trance



















TRANCE         C           
Great Britain  (101 mi)  2013  ‘Scope  d:  Danny Boyle

While there’s no question that Danny Boyle can make a Hollywood film with his eyes closed, it’s never a good thing to simply watch him waste his talent on superfluous films like this one, which certainly showcases his demonstrable skills, but to what end?  While this is essentially a copycat drama, one that owes its existence to Christopher Nolan’s puzzle movies MEMENTO (2000) and INCEPTION (2010), it feels exactly like a fake, carbon copy imitation, lacking the exhilaration of the original, which at least originated in the head of the writer/director.  Boyle seems inclined to match many of the same technical skills, seamlessly blending dreams, memory, and reality to the point where they are often indistinguishable, where the viewer is caught up in a mental labyrinth of no escape, wondering throughout which version of reality will prevail, as the director loves to tease the audience with multiple possibilities.  Unfortunately, borrowing heavily from the formula of other successful movies has become conventional Hollywood entertainment, basically hand-me-down thrills, where little effort has gone into creating anything new.  The result is a slick looking product onscreen, but overly formulaic, where what’s lacking are memorable characters, an essential ingredient in a film with human interaction, but there’s none of that here.  Even with name stars, this entire cast is forgettable, as none of the performances stand out and there isn’t an ounce of tension or suspense throughout.  Despite the hoops the story jumps through, so obviously wanting to be a sophisticated, mind-bender, the film just never generates any interest.  Instead it feels like painting by the numbers, where everyone does a credible job, but nothing feels inspired.  Even the interweaving of the narrative feels tired and worn out, not fresh and inventive, as no one really cares about any of the characters, so by the end, none of it really matters, as it all feels so conventional. 

Two men are at odds throughout, caught up in a heist gone wrong, where one character, James McAvoy’s Simon, seeped in gambling debt, attempts to steal a valuable painting at an art auction, while the man he tries to steal it from, a sleazy lowlife gangster Franck (Vincent Cassel), catches him in the act and lands a haymaker across the chin, causing amnesia, where throughout the film Simon can’t remember where he hid the stolen painting.  After losing a finger or two to tortuous methods, Franck is inclined to believe he really can’t remember, which calls for desperate measures—hypnosis.  Enter Rosario Dawson as the calm, soft-spoken hypnotherapist Elizabeth, whose mix of sexual allure and soothing voice instantly sends Simon into a hypnotic state, where the rest of the film tests the audience’s patience, as the storyline weaves in and out of his altered states.  Meanwhile, Elizabeth joins up with Franck and his gang of thieves, apparently to split the profits of what is likely a multi-million dollar work of art.  While it all seems to blend together too smoothly, as everything in this new alliance goes without a hitch, except Simon keeps losing his focus and concentration, no doubt due to the stress from the fact these men are bound and determined to kill him once they get the information out of him.  Elizabeth keeps wafting back and forth as one of the gang, but she also has a man totally at her mercy during a submissive state, where she can program literally anything into his head.  While continually leading Franck on, vowing allegiance to his criminal mentality, offering him sexual favors as well, she also plays up her sexual allure with the patient, thinking if Simon gets what he wants, then he’ll reveal to her what she wants, which is the information.  In this way, Elizabeth becomes a blatant sex object throughout the film, both in fantasy and reality, where Rosario Dawson has an interesting nude scene with Simon, where she’s the projection of his fantasies, but the surreal nature of his fears keeps intervening, altering the landscape while constantly shifting the tenuous dynamic between the two of them.  

What seems like a romantic love triangle between Elizabeth and both men is played out against a myriad of repressed and forgotten memories, where Elizabeth’s own motives continually shift throughout the film, growing out of control, developing her own personal side story of events with Simon leading up to the art heist, so while she’s attempting to unravel the truth about where the painting it hidden, she’s also got some ulterior motive about erasing his other memories, wiping the past clean, literally lifting the storyline from Michel Gondry’s ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND (2004), apparently thinking the public had forgotten.  Elizabeth’s over the top conversion from quasi therapist who’s not against turning herself into a sex object with a patient to a mercilessly powerful, spurned lover who would turn hypnosis into some kind of tyrannical mind control is something you’d more likely see from Ming the Merciless in a cheap sci-fi movie attempting to take control of the entire universe.  This storyline abomination changes everything that came before, where there isn’t a single sympathetic character anywhere in the movie, making everyone out for themselves, so what’s the point of all the plot twists?  But as the audience quickly loses interest in the various versions of reality and dreams and wish fulfillments, all that’s left is the ultimate showdown where they spend a gazillion dollars on blowing things up and special effects, all designed in the name of Hollywood entertainment.  Instead of the blur of fast action explosions and demolition that passes for conventional movie entertainment these days, this one instead delves into the deconstruction of thought, where the director gets to perform technical trickery with the camera and various editing schemes, but he’s simply omitted the human element.  When there’s no one left to care about, what’s to sustain the interest in the film?  As it goes through its various machinations and transformations, it just feels like such a con job, like it’s the audience that’s getting ripped off.  And unfortunately, that’s the reality that matters, as this movie is little more than contrived manipulation, making a sucker out of the audience by giving them old, retrodden material at the same price you pay for something new.  For a director with the stature of Danny Boyle, this is the ultimate disappointment, as this is little more than a commercial sell out.     

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Sleeping Beauty














SLEEPING BEAUTY                           B-              
Australia  (101 mi)  2011  d:  Julia Leigh                      Official site

It’s hard to fathom what women find groundbreaking in sexual objectification these days, but in this film novelist Julia Leigh has brought her talents to screenwriting and directing, creating a mystifyingly strange film defined by its emotional passivity, which may be a comment on the human condition, as we’re allowing anything to happen to the planet without reacting with much outrage, the United States invaded Iraq under false pretext, but the world sat around and offered little response and instead simply allowed it to happen, and AIDS is ravaging through the continent of Africa while many progressive African leaders still remain in denial about even acknowledging the disease and how it spreads, doing little to counteract its horrific impact.  What separates humans from the other animals is supposedly the human consciousness, but do you suppose Ms. Leigh is suggesting we’re simply not using ours or that we’re sitting around and allowing governments and wars to run amok, where the feeble human outcry is pitiful?  Perhaps, yet this is expressed through a strictly sexual contextualization, where Emily Browning plays Lucy, a college student who also works as a Xerox copy girl, a waitress, and side jobs as a high class prostitute, but needing more cash, becomes an upscale specialized call girl for an exclusive men’s club serviced by scantily clad women designed to please.  Lucy hasn’t reached the level of prostitute there yet, as she’s considered entry level material, but should things go well, career advancements are offered. 

Lucy’s specialty at the men’s club is taking a sleeping potion that effectively puts her to sleep, where men can do anything they wish except penetration, where she wakes in the morning without any recollection of what transpired.  This is a job that requires beauty, where amnesia is built right into the job description.  This seems to fit into Lucy’s impassive demeanor, where she has few friends, doesn’t care much about school, yet allows strange things to happen to her, where she signs up for weird scientific experiments which are difficult to watch.  She seems to have a serious relationship with a guy known as Birdman (Ewen Leslie) who we never see leave his room, as he’s apparently an ex-addict, yet their dialogue together feels intentionally forced and artificial, as if this a standard routine between them, perhaps learned behavior which feels like a variation of the outlandishly tame Ozzie and Harriet TV show of the 1950’s.  So they spice things up by drinking vodka.  Still, despite a personal connection, she remains perfectly detached, never showing the slightest feelings, which is exactly how she expresses herself in all her other work, including her specialized nighttime performance of Sleeping Beauty.        

Leigh’s sensibility is a writer, where the accumulation of details is a refined skill, where Geoffrey Simpson’s lush cinematography is significant as well, opening in a dreary medical lab, continuing to find more elaborate settings until eventually she’s photographed under ideal circumstances and appears to be a porcelain doll, perhaps a perfect expression of female beauty, like THE STEPFORD WIVES (1975), whose beauty remains illusory.  In this view, women are perceived as empty receptacles, like a beautiful vase that holds fresh flowers, which will be useless in a week after the flowers wilt.  The real flaw is that in her pursuit of perfection, she’s incapable of any real connection in the world, as evidenced by the near perfect exterior veneer at the men’s club, which is all about manner and the appearance of luxury and hedonism, as the men themselves are old and withering, rather pathetic imitations of the virile men they once were, now disgusted with themselves and their lives, hardly the sort of men who could appreciate the sexual company of any woman any more, so they purchase a picture of pretense, an unsoiled, artificial world where women are no more than decorations, like a wall painting to look at.  The unique formalism of the film couldn’t express more human detachment, where the stark nudity on display is stylishly empty, like turning the pages of a magazine.  Not sure this ever really makes its point, but the experience is unsettling.