Saturday, May 18, 2024

Hammarskjöld / Hammarskjöld: Fight for Peace


Per Fly: Hammarskjöld / Hammarskjöld: Fight for Peace (SE 2023) starring Mikael Persbrandt.

Hammarskjöld.
    SE/NO/DK © 2023 Unlimited Stories AB. P: Patrick Ryborn.
    D: Per Fly. SC: Ulf Ryberg, Per Fly. Cin: John Christian Rosenlund - TRIBE7 BLACKWING7 prime lenses - scope - 4K - DCP. PD: Niels Sejer. AD: Thomas Gubb. Set Dec: Louise Drake, Birrie le Roux. Cost: Karen Fabritius Gram, Pierre Vienings. Makeup: Mia Joksimovic. SFX: Doug Hardy. VFX: Alex Hansson. M: Raymond Enoksen. Samuel Barber: Adagio for Strings (1936). S: Hans Møller. ED: Fredrik Morheden. Casting: Shakyra Dowling.
    C: Mikael Persbrandt (Dag Hammarskjöld), Francis Chouler (Bill Ranalla), Richard Brake (Hunter), Sara Soulié (Hanna), Hakeem Kae-Kazim (Moise Tshombe), Cian Barry (Wieschhoff), Colin Salmon (Ralph Bunche), Adam Neill (Lord Lansdowne), Celine Tshika (Ruth Tshombe), Thure Lindhardt (Peter Levin), Sanna Sundqvist (Greta Beskow), Mattias Nordkvist (Bo Beskow), Sven Ahlström (Sture Linnér), Edvin Endre (young Dag Hammarskjöld), Jordan Duvigneau (Patrice Lumumba), Michael D. Xavier (Hellemans), Martin Venter (Renard), Mattias Nordkvist (Bo Beskow), Zak Rowlands (Baldini), Sven Ahlsgröm (Sture Linnér), Bjorn Steinbach (Lone Ranger), Brian Caspe (Shelton), Seán Duggan (Conor O'Brien), Vasili Mishchenko (Nikita Khrushchev), Caspar Phillipson (John F. Kennedy), Christophe Guybet (Bloock), Urs Rechn (Kirov), David James (Congo Red).
    Loc: mostly South Africa (Cape Town, Johannesburg), New York City, Trollhättan, Österlen, Norway.
    Languages: English (main), Swedish, French.
    114 min
    World distribution: Beta Cinema.
    Swedish premiere: 25 Dec 2023 - distributor: Nordisk Film AB.
    Nominated for seven awards at the Guldbagge Gala in 2024.
    Festival premiere: 27 Jan 2024 International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR).
    Finnish premiere: 17 May 2024 - released by Nordisk Film - Finnish / Swedish subtitles by Arja Sundell / Charlotte Elo.
    Viewed at Finnkino Kinopalatsi 9, Helsinki, Saturday, 18 May 2024.

BETA CINEMA: ABOUT THE FILM 
" Based on historical facts and including the results of the most recent investigations, this political thriller puts one of mankind’s most respected diplomats into the limelight. Dag Hammarskjöld has shaped international politics, led the very first blue helmet mission, and is considered the man who ended colonization. John F. Kennedy once called Hammarskjöld “the greatest statesman of our century”. "
 
" Director and screenwriter Per Fly (Backstabbing For Beginners, The Bench) alternates thriller, action and personal drama, also following a personal storyline that shows a private, faithful man, who in the late 50s and early 60s saw no possibility to follow his sexual orientation. A politician with a strong personality and uncompromising moral stance, who sacrificed his life for peace and the good of all. Indeed, he turned his longings and learnings into highly respected poetry. Until today, the posthumously published collection of poetry Markings is considered a moving spiritual classic: "Perhaps the greatest testament of personal devotion published in this century." (The New York Times).  "
   
BETA CINEMA LOGLINE 
" Based on a true story. Dag Hammarskjöld has reached the peak of his power, serving as Secretary General of the United Nations during the height of the Cold War. However, his life is turned upside down when an old friend shows up in New York. At the same time, he tries to make peace in the Congo, an undertaking that proves to be mission impossible. "
 
BETA CINEMA SYNOPSIS 
" In 1961, Dag Hammarskjöld has one year left as Secretary-General of the United Nations. The Cold War is at its peak, and its epicenter is the newly formed Democratic Republic of Congo. Hammarskjöld takes it upon himself to create a unified and peaceful nation out of the chaos left behind by Belgium. At the same time Hammarskjöld’s life is turned upside down when an old friend unexpectedly shows up in New York. He realizes that he has missed out on an important part of life – and that it might be too late. This throws him into a battle between his sense of duty to the United Nations and a true friendship. In the Congo, UN peacekeepers are killed in open battle by mercenaries paid for by the mining industry, which is conspiring against Hammarskjöld’s plans for national unity. In September 1961, he boards a plane in the Congo in a final desperate attempt to resolve the conflict, unknowingly embarking on the most dangerous journey of his life. "
  
PER FLY: DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
 
Pray that your loneliness 
may spur you into finding something to live for, great enough to die for.
- Dag Hammarskjöld 
  
" This short poem that Dag Hammarskjöld wrote in 1952 captures the core of his character: his loneliness, his wish for a meaningful life - and death - as a fulfillment of the plan God made for him. I have been fascinated by this mysterious character for years. "

" Dag Hammarskjöld was the second Secretary-General of the newly founded United Nations. A highly skilled diplomat, Kennedy called him the greatest statesman ever. He was a fearless idealist who wanted a strong UN based on the recently established concept of human rights. His goal was to create an international society in which all countries would work together towards a better world for all. World peace in our time. "

" He lived in an enormous apartment in Upper Manhattan with his butler Rolf and his beloved pet monkey Mr. Greenback. An extensive collection of poems that he had written over the course of his lifetime was found after his death. Nobody had known about them. In his own words, these poems are the one and only key to the truth about his life. Dag Hammarskjöld was very secretive about everything regarding his personal life, which led to a lot of speculations about his sexuality. In a time when homosexuality was illegal, allegations of homosexuality could serve as weapons in the political wars. He suffered two smear campaigns during his time in office. "

" When he launched the UN’s ambitious de-colonization program in late 1959, he initiated a fight with the most powerful forces in the world, and the last nine months of his life became a thrilling drama about greed, violence, and longing, played out in the frightening world of the Cold War, where the killing of politicians was just a part of normal affairs. "

Adrian Martin (IFFR 2024): " “In our age, the road to holiness necessarily passes through the world of action”. So wrote the revered Swedish statesman Dag Hammarskjöld in Markings, his private journal of poems and thoughts published posthumously. In his period as Secretary General of the United Nations, Hammarskjöld made extraordinary progress in defusing global conflicts and, particularly, combating colonialism. This path, which he defended tenaciously, won him many enemies. When renewed trouble broke out in the Congo, Hammarskjöld felt compelled to organise a quasi-secret peacekeeping force, placing even his UN position in question. "

" Hammarskjöld was not merely a solitary person, but also an enigmatic one. Biographers continue to argue over the facts of his life and psychology, but director Per Fly takes a definite stance on his subject. As powerfully portrayed by Mikael Persbrandt (who already played the part in The Siege of Jadotville, dir. Richie Smith,  2016), Hammarskjöld is someone who denied his gay sexuality partly because of an almost religious commitment to his political role and the personal sacrifice it demanded. Likewise, this gripping biopic does not equivocate on the still disputed matter of Hammarskjöld’s tragic death in a plane crash. " – Adrian Martin

AA: The Swedish nobleman Dag Hammarskjöld (1905-1961), the second Secretary-General of the United Nations, was the follower of the Norwegian Trygve Lie who warned him about "the most impossible job in the world". Hammarskjöld was a leading Swedish economist, a secretary of Sweden's central bank, state secretary in the Ministry of Finance, his country's delegate in the conference that established the Marshall Plan and his father's follower in the Swedish Academy. Known as an "aristo-bureaucrat", he never joined a political party.

Hammarskjöld landed in the middle of a global transformation after the Second World War: decolonization. The Age of Empire ended. Decolonization went on over decades, ending in 1974 with Portugal's Carnation Revolution. Massive turbulence, such as India's independence movement, emerged everywhere. Hammarskjöld helped negotiate the liberation of 15 American soldiers imprisoned in China after the Korean War. He helped in conflicts in Palestine, Israel and Cambodia. He received a posthumous Nobel Peace Prize in 1961.

Per Fly's film focuses on the year 1961 in the liberation struggle of Congo from colonialism. The Belgian Congo was a colony until independence in 1960. In the 19th century it has been the private property of King Leopold II of the Belgians, under circumstances made legendary by Heart of Darkness (1899) by Joseph Conrad based on his first hand observations. Republic of the Congo (1960-1964) was established, with Patrice Lumumba (1960) as its first Prime Minister. A complication arose since French Congo (1882-1960) achieved independence at the same time, and the former Belgian and French Congos initially claimed the same name. Lumumba was an African nationalist and pan-Africanist. Belgian big business protected huge mining interests in Katanga. A breakaway State of Katanga was created under Moise Tshombe. Supported by Belgium and the United States, chief of staff of the army Mobutu arranged a coup d'état and the execution of Lumumba. The Lumumba story has been the subject of Raoul Peck's stunning Lumumba, la mort du prophète (1991). Seeing the electrifying footage of Lumumba's harassment (also shown in Per Fly's film) was the turning-point for Souleymane Cissé in which he realized that cinema might be a medium for him: "Personne ne respirait. C'était un moment très fort".

In this minefield Hammarskjöld does his best to pursue justice. The Soviet Union in the person of Nikita Khrushchev demands him to resign, but Hammarskjöld persists. Hammarskjöld pursues the use of the UN Peacekeeping Force to pacify Congo, but he exceeds his authority. He is a brave leader who is not afraid of adversaries. But the US President John F. Kennedy, his admirer, even in decolonization, strongly urges him to secure wide support before moving on.

Per Fly with his charismatic leading actor Mikael Persbrandt creates a magnificent epic based on reality in the big outline and artistic liberty in much of the detail and the cast. The big picture seems fair and authentic. The portrait of Dag Hammarskjöld is powerful and meaningful. It takes a special character such as the one portrayed here to deal both with superpowers and all other countries and get results.

Hammarskjöld is a man of the world and a cosmopolitan. He is also a loner who lives like a monk. I don't believe in this film's interpretation of repressed homosexuality. I believe that Hammarskjöld's lineage in nobility is a more essential feature, as well as his Christian faith. I believe that Hammarskjöld saw himself as a Crusader for peace. I think he incarnated the motto "noblesse oblige". He who has been granted everything sees as his obligation to pay it forward. Being born to privilege in many ways, he did his best to pay back his debt of honour. His personal philosophy is crystal clear in his only book Vägmärken / Waymarks (1963), published posthumously.

I thank Per Fly for a rewarding film. I don't know about the production circumstances but I feel that the film might be a victim of the "pandemic-phlegmatic curse" and might have turned more energetic and engrossing in regular conditions.

BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM THE BETA CINEMA PRESS KIT FOR ROTTERDAM:

Dag Hammarskjöld: Vägmärken / Waymarks (a book of poetry)


Dag Hammarskjöld: Vägmärken [Waymarks]. His only book was published posthumously in 1963. The first English translation (Markings, 1964) was by Leif Sjöberg and W. H. Auden. The Finnish translation Kiinnekohtia (1964) was by Sinikka Kallio.

Vägen, 
du skall följa den.

Lyckan,
du skall glömma den.

Kalken,
du skall tömma den.

Smärtan,
du skall dölja den.

Svaret,
du skall lära det.

Slutet,
du skall bära det.

...

The way,
You shall follow it.

Success,
You shall forget it.

The cup,
You shall empty it.

The pain,
You shall conceal it.

The answer,
You shall learn it.

The end,
You shall endure it.

6. 601203 

[The last of the six waymarks in 1960 - 3 December 1960.]
© Albert Bonniers Förlag AB 1963
© Bernhard Erling 1982 (Translation), 1987 (A Reader’s Guide to Dag Hammarskjöld's Waymarks)
ISBN 978-0-9602240-3-6
St. Peter, Minnesota 56082

...

Tie,
se tulee seurata.

Onni,
sen voit unohtaa.

Kalkki -
viime pisaraan.

Tuska -
syvään piiloita.

Vastaus
tulee oppia.

Loppu
hyvin kohdata.

Translated by the composer Einojuhani Rautavaara.

Einojuhani Rautavaara: Dag Hammarskjöld: Vägmärken - pp. 144-146 in the anthology: Maarit Tyrkkö (ed.): Tätä runoa en unohda [This Poem I Will Not Forget] - 101 Finnish lovers of poetry selected their favourite poem. Helsinki: Otava, 1977.

Saturday, May 11, 2024

Following


Christopher Nolan: Following (GB 1998). Alex Haw as Cobb.

Following / Following.
    GB © 1998 Christopher Nolan. Production company: Next Wave Films. Produced by: Christopher Nolan, Jeremy Theobald, Emma Thomas.
    Directed by Christopher Nolan
Written by Christopher Nolan
Cinematography  Christopher Nolan - 16 mm - b&w - Academy
Music by David Julyan
Edited by Gareth Heal, Christopher Nolan
    Cast
Jeremy Theobald as The Young Man Bill / Daniel Lloyd
Alex Haw as Cobb
Lucy Russell as The Blonde
John Nolan as The Policeman
Dick Bradsell as The Bald Guy
Gillian El-Kadi as Home Owner
Jennifer Angel as Waitress
Nicolas Carlotti as Barman
Darren Ormandy as Accountant
    Budget $6,000
    Box office $126,052
    70 min
    Distributed by Momentum Pictures
Release dates:
    24 April 1998 (San Francisco)
    5 November 1999 (United Kingdom)
    Finnish premiere: 10 May 2024 - Syncopy logo - released by ELKE - Finnish subtitles (only) by Sami Siitojoki.
    DCP viewed at Kinopalatsi 9, Helsinki, Saturday, 11 May 2024

IMDb synopsis : " A young writer who follows strangers for material meets a thief who takes him under his wing. "

AA: On the occasion of the Finnish premiere of Following and in memory of David Bordwell I read the e-book Christopher Nolan: A Labyrinth of Linkages (2013, second edition 2019 free online) by David Bordwell with Kristin Thompson. Recommended! In his late work Bordwell was at his best.

I admire Christopher Nolan as a representative of the industrial-architectural school of film-making like James Cameron and Stanley Kubrick. It requires rare ability and talent to make global blockbusters with a personal signature and commitment. Never more than now when world cinema is in its biggest crisis and it has never been more difficult to make personal work on the highest budget echelon. In the middle of the pandemic Nolan achieved that twice, with Tenet and Oppenheimer.

These are my first impressions of Following, Christopher Nolan's debut feature film, which I saw for the first time.

Following reminds me of the early low budget work of Anthony Mann, Richard Fleischer and Stanley Kubrick. Circumstances are limited, but spirit is unbounded. There is true drive and a cinematic passion.

Following is already a family affair, with Emma Thomas as a producer partner and uncle John Nolan among the cast (as the policeman in the beginning and the end).

As analyzed by Bordwell & Thompson, Following is already an exercise in the nonlinear narrative like most of Nolan's movies. Timelines are twisted, and only towards the end we begin to make sense of the fabula. Bordwell & Thompson register four timelines of which three are crosscut.

The mystery of the timelines is not a merely formal device. Nolan's movies are time-plays with an experimental and philosophical dimension. Oppenheimer is a movie about quantum physics and the theory of relativity. Time is a key theme and subject in Nolan's films from Following till Oppenheimer.

Shot by Nolan himself on 16 mm stock in black and white Academy, Following is visually stark and original. It turns into a gangster movie of the hard-boiled school, but it begins as a study in urban solitude, in the classic tradition of Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Man of the Crowd" (1840). It is full of intriguing details, often covered in close-ups. The meanings of many details are gradually revealed during the non-linear course of the movie. Other details are just fun to register, like the Batman logo on the door, and the Mark Rothko exhibition poster.

Following is often called a film noir, a term I hesitate to use about films after Touch of Evil (1958). Now thinking about Nolan's oeuvre from Following till Oppenheimer, I find the connection relevant to all his movies, including in his apocalyptic Batman movies. In the conclusion of The Dark Knight Rises a neutron bomb is detonated. For me, film noir is poetry after Auschwitz, a poetic expression of the cosmic dread manifested in the Second World War, including Hiroshima. A sense of metaphysical agony on streets dark with something more than night. I would not call Nolan's movies films noir, but I would not start an argument if someone did.

Among the cast, I am struck by Lucy Russell who gives an unpredictable interpretation as the femme fatale. It was also her debut feature film, the start of an interesting career. Next she starred in Éric Rohmer's L'Anglaise et le duc - as L'Anglaise. Read Lucy Russell's Mini Bio in the IMDb - written by herself.

Within a week, I have seen two movies about burglary, breaking and entering, not (only) to steal, but to secretly inhabit the home of someone else (the previous one was Paradise Is Burning). Steven Zaillian's Ripley TV series (US 2024, starring Andrew Scott) has inspired discussions about the topical interest in faking the identity of the well-off or secretly inhabiting his place like in Parasite. It is a subject also in Following, but it turns out to be a subplot and cover story for crimes more brutal.

BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM WIKIPEDIA:

Une belle course / Driving Madeleine

 
Christian Carion: Une belle course / Driving Madeleine (FR/BE 2022). Line Renaud (Madeleine Keller) and Dany Boon (Charles Kaufman).

Madeleinen Pariisi / Madeleine och taxichauffören.
    FR/BE © 2022 Une Hirondelle Productions - Pathé Films - TF1 Films Production - Artémis Productions. Associated Co-PC: Bright Lights Films - Kobayashi Communication. Production : Laure Irrmann et Christian Carion. Coproducteurs : Ardavan Safaee et Patrick Quinet. Associate producers : Marie de Cenival, Laurent Bruneteau et Thomas Bruxelle. Executive producer: Stéphane Riga.
    Fiche technique
Réalisation : Christian Carion
Screenplay and dialogue : Cyril Gély - adaptation : Christian Carion.
Photographie : Pierre Cottereau - couleur
Décors : Chloé Cambournac
Costumes : Agnès Noden
Musique : Philippe Rombi
Son : Pascal Jasmes, François Maurel, Thomas Desjonquères, Thomas Gauder.
Montage : Loïc Lallemand
Casting : Gigi Akoka
    Distribution:
Dany Boon : Charles
Line Renaud : Madeleine
Alice Isaaz : Madeleine, jeune
Jérémie Laheurt-Fine : Ray
Julie Delarme : Karine
Gwendoline Hamon : Denise
Elie Kaempfen : Matt
Thomas Alden : Mathieu
Hadriel Roure : Mathieu, jeune
Jacques Courtès : Daniel
Carl Laforêt : l'automobiliste impatient
Christophe Rossignon : le président du tribunal
    Budget : 7,94 millions d'euros
Langue originale : français
Genre : comédie dramatique, road movie
91 min
    Dates de sortie :
France : août 2022 (festival d'Angoulême - film d'ouverture) - Société de distribution : Pathé Distribution (France)
Canada : septembre 2022 (festival de Toronto)
France : 21 septembre 2022
Finlande : 15 mars 2024 - Cinema Mondo - Finnish / Swedish subtitles by Outi Kainulainen / Joanna Erkkilä.
    Viewed at Maxim 2, Helsinki, Saturday 11 May 2024

Synopsis from the press kit: " Madeleine, 92 years old, calls a taxi to take her to the retirement home where she will be living. Charles, a disillusioned driver with a tender heart, agrees to drive by the places that affected Madeleine’s life. Through the streets of Paris, her extraordinary past is revealed. They don’t know it yet, but they will forge a friendship during this drive that will change their lives forever. "

AA: At first sight, Christian Carion's Driving Madeleine is a piece of feelgood entertainment, based on surefire ingredients: - the star pair Line Renaud and Dany Boon, acting together also in Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis (Welcome to the Sticks, FR 2008, D: Dany Boon), the highest grossing French film of all time - a wonderful sightseeing tour of Paris full of beloved landmarks - the improbable friendship between a male driver and an elderly lady like in Driving Miss Daisy - soundtrack spiced with nostalgic international crossover hits by Dinah Washington and Etta James - the grudging taxi driver and the procrastinating lady ending up having the time of their lives - the taxi driver never charging for the round-the-clock ride, instead inviting the lady to dinner before the destination - but with a fairy-tale envelope from Madeleine's lawyer at the cemetery.

From this angle, Driving Madeleine delivers, and it is reportedly a pioneering technical achievement. Most of the movie takes place inside the taxi, but it was entirely shot in the studio. Paris traffic is difficult / impossible anyway, and especially with a 92 year old star. The DP Pierre Cottereau covered the whole journey from every possible angle in advance and employed a new generation LED screen system of transparencies, 4K high definition L-shaped screens in all directions, including the sky, better than greenscreens, in which actors have to imagine the surroundings. The immersion was total, and actors felt like they were in a moving car, including in the collision with the kid on an electric scooter. For the viewer, Une belle course is a gratifying cinematic Paris tour. Having returned two weeks ago from the 11th arrondissement, I was happy to revisit Place de la République and Avenue Parmentier together with Line Renaud (Madeleine Keller) and Dany Boon (Charles Kaufman).

Inside the sightseeing trip and the fairytale narrative there is a tough core. Madeleine is a young woman when the occupation ends and Paris is liberated. There is a love affair with Matt, a G.I., and a son, Mathieu, abandoned by him. There is a husband, Ray, who turns violent to both Madeleine and Mathieu. Brutalizing and disgracing Mathieu is the last straw. Madeleine poisons Ray and torches him where it hurts most. Madeleine is convicted to a 25 year prison sentence by an all male jury (moderated to 13 due to good behaviour). Meanwhile, by 1968, her son Mathieu has grown to a man who condemns his mother because of whom he has been bullied all his life. He goes to Vietnam as a war photographer and returns in a coffin.

There is no soft-pedalling in this territory. The movie is a time travel in gender discrimination. In France, women got to vote in 1948, but Madeleine tells Charles «the fifties weren’t like today...» Women had to get their husbands’ permission to work or have access to household money. In a scene unplanned by the film-makers, Madeleine and Charles walk past a City of Paris poster with the face of Simone Veil - remembered for Loi Veil, legalizing abortion in France in 1975. In the press notes, Christian Carion estimates that although times have changed, issues of femicide and domestic violence are even more serious today, because there are men who revenge on women for equality.

Regarding the young Madeleine's life during the Occupation there is a visit to a courtyard with a commemorative plaque to three Resistance fighters shot on 7 October 1943, including Lucien Keller, Madeleine's father. If the characters Madeleine Keller and Charles Kaufman, are Jewish, this is the only clue besides their names. [The actor Dany Boon, whose father was an Algerian Muslim, converted to Judaism when he married Yaël Harris, and also his previous wife Judith Godrèche was Jewish. Boon has been active in fighting antisemitism]. The desolate reminder of the plaque challenges the viewer to reassess the escapism of the project.

The deeply felt and nuanced interplay of Line Renaud and Dany Boon is the greatest reward of Driving Madeleine. At age 92, Line Renaud is full of life, wit and energy. Dany Boon, France's most popular comic actor, proves how great a comedian can be in a serious part.
 
BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM THE PRESS KIT:

Havumetsän lapset / Once Upon a Time in a Forest


Virpi Suutari: Havumetsän lapset / Once Upon a Time in a Forest (FI 2024) with Ida Korhonen, activist in Metsäliike (bringing together members of Elokapina, Greenpeace and Luontoliitto).

Barrskogens barn.
    FI 2024 Euphoria Film Oy. P: Virpi Suutari & Martti Suosalo.
    D+SC: Virpi Suutari. Cin: Teemu Liakka, Jani Kumpulainen F.S.C. - 1:2,39 and 4:3, 25 fps. M Sanna Salmenkallio. S: Olli Huhtanen. ED: Jussi Rautaniemi F.C.E. 
    Non-fiction.
    Featuring:
- Ida Korhonen on 23-vuotias ympäristöaktivisti ja metsätieteiden opiskelija.
- Minka Virtanen on 29-vuotias aktivisti, joka joka toimii useissa eri ruohonjuuritason liikkeissä ja isommissa järjestöissä.
- Otto Snellman on 29-vuotias yhteiskunnallisesti aktiivinen filosofian väitöskirjatutkija.
- Ville Murmann on 35-vuotias Luontoliiton metsäryhmän kartoituskoordinaattori, joka selvittää metsien luontoarvoja.
- Otso Piitulainen on 21-vuotias ympäristötieteiden opiskelija, jota kiinnostaa yhteiskunnallinen vaikuttaminen.
    Inspired by: Juha Kauppinen: Heräämisiä - kuinka minusta tuli luonnonsuojelija (2021).
    92 min
Festival premiere: CPH:DOX, Copenhagen, 16 March 2024.
Finnish premiere: 28 March 2024 - B-Plan Distribution.
    Viewed with Finnish subtitles for the hard-of-hearing at Kinopalatsi 4, Helsinki, Saturday 11 May 2024.

Literal translations of the Finnish title: "Children of the Taiga", "Children of the Conifer Forest".

MUBI synopsis: " Biodiversity and generation gaps collide in a politically urgent and thoughtful film about two young activists' fight to save the vast Finnish forests. Is it still civil disobedience when you know you have both history and the future on your side? "
    " Ida and Minka share a boundless love for the Finnish forests and a deep respect for nature. But not everyone agrees. The two young environmentalists demonstrate against deforestation and eventually win a seat at the table with the older, bearded men that represent the powerful giants of the timber industry. But one thing is the industry, another thing entirely is to convince your own grandfather, who has spent a lifetime clearing and planting trees, that wild nature means everything to biodiversity and to the future of the planet. The gaps between generations are deep, the climate fight is also a cultural struggle. Fortunately, Finnish filmmaker Virpi Suutari has an eye for more than bitter conflicts and hard fronts, and with commendable humanity (and a dose of understated humour) she has created that great film about nature, the future and the climate that the world has been waiting for – nothing less. And in the spirit of its young activists, it is also a beautiful and thoughtful tribute to nature itself, with tadpoles and flying squirrels as witnesses to the great human drama. " (MUBI synopsis)

Synopsis from the press dossier: " Palkitun Virpi Suutarin uusi elokuva Havumetsän lapset pöllyttää raikkaalla tavalla käsityksiämme metsistä ja niiden suojelusta. Elokuvan nuoret päähenkilöt Ida, Minka, Otto, Ville ja Otso haluavat pelastaa Suomen metsät. Vastassaan heillä on metsäteollisuus ja kansallinen ideologia metsistä taloudellisen hyvinvoinnin perustana. Ovatko nuoret sankareita vai isänmaan pettureita puolustaessaan jäkäliä ja katoamassa olevia hömötiaisia? Suutarin humaani metsäkertomus kuljettaa katsojansa lumoavalle luontomatkalle vanhojen havupuiden suojasta Aalistunturin huipulle, selluteollisuuden kabineteista Idan isoisä Taunon, entisen metsätyömiehen, kotisohvalle. Suomen ja suomalaisuuden kuvaajana ansioituneen Suutarin (mm. Aalto, Eedenistä pohjoiseen) elokuva ravistelee kohtaamaan hupenevan metsäluontomme kauneuden ja hädän. "

AA: There can be no more important theme than the one discussed by Virpi Suutari in Havumetsän lapset.

It is about Extinction Rebellion. The movement's eloquent Finnish title is Elokapina ["Life Rebellion". "Elo" is short for "Elämä" (Life), as even in "Elokuva" ("Life Image"), Finnish for "movie / film / cinema"].

It is about generation rebellion - the young desperate about the future of life on Earth. A matter of life and death. We the older generations are living like there is no tomorrow. For the young it is a question of whether there is a life span worth living and raising a new generation anymore.

They are powerless, they lack the weight of experience and the skill of argumentation that the forest industry behemoths possess. David vs. Goliath.

We have always known and accomplished much, but far from enough. Personally, born in 1955, as soon as I could understand, I became aware. Rachel Carson's Silent Spring appeared in 1962 and was published in Finnish the year after.

Suutari excels in pantheistic passages of sublime Lapland. I have never seen more breathtaking nature images, including underwater footage of swimming in Lapland's icy lakes among the perches and the pikes (photographed by the underwater cinematographer wizard Teemu Liakka).

The passages of Elokapina demonstrations are vivid and memorable. There are also historical inserts of the 1979 Koijärvi Movement and the 1991 strikes of civil disobedience.

A formidable theme of the philosophy of law is involved. The young are fighting for their right to live. We who do nothing are putting their lives in danger.

A novel twist in Suutari's movie is the drive towards dialogue: - in encounters with the forest industry - with the Centre Party (Suomen Keskusta), the main voice of the people in the countryside - and with the police and the forest rangers.

Suutari's drive is against polarizing clickbaits. The young actively seek dialogue. The powers-that-be treat them with respect, without condescension. But they speak with the voice of authority. They make promises, but is anything changing in the big picture?

The trouble is, you don't win elections with green promises. You lose, and populists win, with even more devastating consequences. This has been the dilemma since the 1950s.

Havumetsän lapset is a document about a huge communication gap. It is not enough to know, to be right. The big challenge is to engage everybody, starting from the people of the countryside, the ones who really live in the nature, with the nature, close to nature, dramatized in the dialogue between Ida Korhonen the Elokapina activist and her grandfather Tauno from Savo, a former farmer and lumberjack who does not understand a word of what Ida is saying. The cliché of the hipster nature tourists from the city vs. the true people of the countryside must be superseded. Beloved narratives, even the Koijärvi legend, could be examined anew.

There is little time left. A new accent for me here is "Trauerarbeit" [surutyö / grief work / process of grieving / work of mourning]. There may be no future. We are left to celebrate "Die Ehre Gottes aus der Natur" [Jumalan kunnia luonnossa / The Divine Glory from Nature]

...
PS. I saw the movie in a screening with Finnish subtitles for the hard-of-hearing. I am grateful for the identifications of all the bird sounds.

BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM THE PRESS KIT:

Saturday, May 04, 2024

Paradiset brinner / Paradise Is Burning


Mika Gustafson: Paradiset brinner / Paradise Is Burning (SE 2023). Bianca Delbravo (Laura), Dilvin Asaad (Mira) and Safira Mossberg (Steffi).

Siskoni.
    SE 2023 © Hob AB (Nima Yousefi) / Tuffi Films (Venla Hellstedt, Jenni Jauri) / ToolBox Film (Maria Stevnbak Westergren) / IntraMovies (Marco Valerio Fusco, Micaela Fusco). Country: Sweden, Italy, Denmark, Finland.
    Director: Mika Gustafson
Screenplay: Mika Gustafson, Alexander Öhrstrand
Cinematographer: Sine Vadstrup Brooker - Color | 1.78:1
Production Designer: Catharina Nyqvist Ehrnrooth
Costume Designer: Susse Roos
Make Up and Hair Designer: Kaisa Pätilä
Music: Giorgio Giampà
Sound designer: Gustaf Berger - 5.1 & Stereo 
Editor: Anders Skov
Casting director: Elin Ström
    Cast: Bianca Delbravo (Laura, 16), Dilvin Asaad (Mira, 12), Safira Mossberg (Steffi, 7), Ida Engvoll (Hanna), Mitja Sirén (Sasha), Marta Oldenburg (Zara), Alexander Öhrstrand (Hannas man), Isabella Kjellberg (Sandra).
    Film clip: Stalker (SU 1979).
    Language: Swedish
    108 min
    World Sales: Marco Valerio Fusco – Intramovies
    Festival premiere: 7 Sep 2023 Venice Film Festival - Orizzoni prize for best director Mika Gustafson - Authors under 40 Award for best screenwriting Mika Gustafson.
    Swedish premiere: 27 Oct 2023.
    Guldbagge Awards: Best Film (Nima Yousefi) - Best Production Design (Catharina Nyqvist Ehrnrooth) - Best Make-up (Kaisa Pätilä)
    Helsinki premiere: 19 April 2024 - Cinemanse - Finnish subtitles: Janne Kauppila.
    Viewed at Finnkino Kinopalatsi 8, Helsinki, Saturday 4 May 2023.

IMDb logline: " Three sisters aged 7 to 16, live alone after their mother vanishes for whole swathes of time. When the social services demand a family meeting, oldest sister Laura plans to find a stand in for their mother. "

Handling: " Filmen kretsar kring tre systrar, Laura, Mira och Steffi, i åldrarna 7 till 16 år. Eftersom deras mamma är borta under längre perioder, bor systrarna ofta ensamma. När socialtjänsten börjar ställa frågor och kräver ett möte med familjen, planerar äldsta syster Laura att hitta någon kan fungera som stand-in för mamman. För att inte oroa sina yngre syskon, håller hon sin plan hemlig. "

Handling (Svensk Filmdatabas): " Tre systrar, 7 till 15 år, lever ensamma. Mamman försvinner i perioder och det mesta av vardagslivet får systrarna lösa själva. När soc kräver ett familjemöte har den äldsta systern Laura en vecka på sig att hitta någon som kan spela mamman. I sitt sökande efter en låtsasmamma inleder Laura en relation med 35-åriga Hannah. Någonting som inte bara förändrar Laura, utan även situationen for systrarna. "

Synopsis (Venice): " In a working-class area of Sweden, sisters Laura (16), Mira (12) and Steffi (7), get by on their own, left to their own devices by an absent mother. With summer on the way and no parents around, life is wild and carefree, vivacious and anarchic. But when social services call a meeting, Laura has to find someone to impersonate their mom, or the girls will be taken into foster care and separated. Laura keeps the threat a secret, so as not to worry her younger sisters. But as the moment of truth draws closer, new tensions arise, forcing the three sisters to negotiate the fine line between the euphoria of total freedom and the harsh realities of growing up. "

Director's statement (Venice) : " Paradise Burning is a declaration of love to sisterhood. To those who know your story and made you who you are. A bond that’s stronger than everything else. A blessing and a curse all at the same time. For me the film is about the transience of time and life. About memories and reconciliation. I want to show what it’s like to be a human being in those moments when euphoric freedom lies cheek to cheek with total despair and the everyday humor in between. "

AA: In Paradise Is Burning, Mika Gustafson's debut fiction feature, the joy and the energy of Laura (16, Bianca Delbravo), Mira (12, Dilvin Asaad) and Steffi (7, Safira Mossberg) evoke Charlotte Regan's Scrapper (GB 2023), another contemporary tale of childhood lived in freedom, the sunny side of being abandoned by parents. But the story that Paradise Is Burning tells is different. It is about sisterhood, tenderly observed and deeply felt. 

It is a perilous life, because it involves finding ever changing ways to get by without money. Sneaking into vernissages of exhibitions for a maximal catch of cocktail snacks. Shoplifting elevated to an art form. Eating fish fingers after the best before date. Chronical lying to social service officers when failing to appear at school.

Laura has even become an expert burglar who breaks into apartments for a few hours of living the life of others, sometimes in luxury. The girls frequent private swimming pools while the inhabitants are away. This aspect of Paradise Is Burning is a poignant statement about the status of outcasts in a consumer society. It reminds me of Auli Mantila's excellent Ystäväni Henry / My Friend Henry (FI 2004). We are invited into the life of the unseen citizens of our society.

During one of these adventures, Laura meets Hanna (35, Ida Engvoll) into whose home she has broken and entered. Unexpectedly, their encounter turns into friendship and more: a tentative love affair. The account of Hanna's situation remains elliptic, but there is a man (Alexander Öhrstrand, also the co-screenwriter) and a baby. Laura's presence chases him away, and Hanna then turns Laura down. But before that Laura has initiated Hanna into her secret life in other people's apartments and taught her the tricks how to get in and out without drawing attention.

A deadline casts its shadow over the girls' existence. A social service officer is coming, and the clock is ticking. There is a clear and present danger that the sisters will be separated. Hanna does her best to find someone to impersonate their mother. The last candidate is Hanna. Laura's tryst with her has alienated her from her sisters. The doorbell rings.

A recurrent motif is a pack of stray dogs wandering in the neighbourhood. The dog from Stalker is glimpsed on television. But Mika Gustafson's vision is the opposite of Andrei Tarkovsky's dystopia thanks to her warm celebration of community against all odds.

I thank Simo Halinen for recommending Mika Gustafson's remarkable fiction feature debut.

BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM THE PRESS KIT AND BIENNALE DI VENEZIA 2023:

Civil War


Alex Garland: Civil War (GB/US 2024). Great poster, but in the movie, the most powerful symbol is the Washington obelisk.

Civil War / Civil War.
    GB/US 2024 [year of release] © 2023 [Miller August Rights LLC tbc]. Production companies: DNA Films, IPR.VC. Produced by Andrew Macdonald, Allon Reich, Gregory Goodman
Directed by Alex Garland
Written by Alex Garland
Cinematography by Rob Hardy
Music by Ben Salisbury, Geoff Barrow
Edited by Jake Roberts
    Wikipedia: Cast
- Kirsten Dunst as Lee Smith, a renowned war photojournalist from Colorado. She is said to be the youngest-ever member of the Magnum Photos cooperative. The character's first name is a reference to famed World War II photojournalist Lee Miller.
- Wagner Moura as Joel, a Reuters journalist from Florida and Lee's colleague
- Cailee Spaeny as Jessie Cullen, an aspiring young photographer from Missouri who accompanies Lee and Joel on their journey
- Stephen McKinley Henderson as Sammy, a veteran journalist for The New York Times and Lee's mentor
- Nick Offerman as the President of the United States, a dictatorial president currently serving his third term
- Sonoya Mizuno as Anya, a British reporter embedded with the Western Forces' advance on the capital
- Jefferson White as Dave, Anya's cameraman
- Nelson Lee as Tony, a Hongkonger reporter who is good friends with Lee and Joel
- Evan Lai as Bohai, a Hongkonger reporter who is a colleague of Tony
- Jesse Plemons as a racist ultranationalist militant who holds the journalists at gunpoint. Plemons was not credited for the role.
- Karl Glusman as a spotter
- Jin Ha as a sniper
- Juani Feliz as Secret Service Agent Joy Butler
    Loc: - Atlanta, Georgia. - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
    Language: English
    109 min
    Distributed by: A24 (United States), Entertainment Film Distributors (United Kingdom)
    Release dates:
Festival premiere: 14 March, 2024 South by Southwest (SXSW)
London premiere: 11 April, 2024 BFI IMAX, London
US premiere: 12 April, 2024
Finnish premiere 19 April 2024 - released by Cinemanse - Finnish / Swedish subtitles by Ilse Rönnberg / Charlotte Elo
    Viewed at Finnkino Tennispalatsi 10, Helsinki, Saturday 4 May 2024

Tagline: " Welcome to the frontline. "

Official logline: " An adrenaline-fueled thrill ride through a near-future fractured America balanced on the razor's edge. "

IMDb logline (from SXSW): " A journey across a dystopian future America, following a team of military-embedded journalists as they race against time to reach DC before rebel factions descend upon the White House. "

The division of the United States in the movie:
    Loyalist states (United States)
    Western Forces
    Florida Alliance
    New People's Army

AA: Alex Garland's Civil War is a dystopia, a war movie and a war journalist movie. Not a true genre movie, Civil War remains unclassifiable, with elements of science fiction and horror. Not a political movie in a specific way, it is a vision about a broken society. One of the trailers in the show was for Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, resonating with the main picture.

Civil War reminds me of Medium Cool (US 1969), Die Fälschung (DE 1981), The Year of Living Dangerously (AU 1982), The Killing Fields (GB 1984), Welcome to Sarajevo (GB 1997) and Mr. Jones (PL 2019). Most of all it reminds me of Apocalypse Now (US 1979), not a journalist movie, but another journey to the heart of darkness.

When the film starts, the war is about to come to a conclusion. A team of journalists rushes towards Washington D.C. for the biggest scoop - the surrender of the increasingly dictatorial president (Nick Offerman).

Besides the daredevil Joel (Wagner Moura) there is his close colleague, the star photographer Lee Smith (Kirsten Dunst), and her mentor, the journalist veteran Sammy (Stephen McKinley Henderson) "from what is left of The New York Times", the voice of reason. There is competition but even more importantly, solidarity. In the beginning, Lee rescues a cub photojournalist, Jessie Cullen (Cailee Spaeny), from a suicide bombing scene. During the journey there are even more engrossing instances of "what greater love is there than one willing to lay down their life for his friends".

Lee is not exactly happy to learn that she is Jessie's role model. Clearly Lee would not recommend anybody to follow her. Next morning, to her dismay, Lee finds out that Joel has invited Jessie to join their perilous journey from New York to Washington, D.C. It is an infernal odyssey. War brings out the worst of us.

The idol of both Lee Smith and Jessie Cullen is Lee Miller, the legendary photographer and photojournalist, honoured by Lee Smith even in her name. In the centenary year of surrealism, we remember Lee Miller as Man Ray's model, companion and herself the creator of some of the most memorable surrealist photographs. In WWII Lee Miller became a top war correspondent, often teaming with David E. Scherman. 

This war is different from the Second World War. In the Temptations song "War" (Norman Whitfield, Barrett Strong, 1970), the chorus was "War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing", but here a further step is taken: for many, what is the war about? "Absolutely nothing". It is about violence for violence's sake. It is about the killing instinct.

Media is getting obsolete. Nobody reads. There is no internet. The star journalists are after the biggest scoop. But who is going to know? The victorious army gets its trophy like in a big game hunt. It is a hollow victory for both soldiers and their journalist-parasites in a world without values.

BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: DATA FROM WIKIPEDIA:

Le Théorème de Marguerite / Marguerite's Theorem


Anna Novion: Le Théorème de Marguerite / Marguerite's Theorem (FR/CH
 2023). Ella Rumpf (Marguerite Hoffmann).

Margureriten teoreema / Marguerites teorem.
    FR/ CH © 2023 TS Productions / France 2 Cinéma [co-pc] / RTS Radio Télévision Suisse [co-pc] / Beauvoir Films [co-pc]. P: Adrian Blaser, Miléna Poylo, Gilles Sacuto et Aline Schmid.
    Format : couleur — 2,35:1 — son 5.1 — DCP
    Fiche technique
Réalisation : Anna Novion
Scénario : Agnès Feuvre, Marie-Stéphane Imbert, Anna Novion et Mathieu Robin
Photographie : Jacques Girault
Décors : Anne-Sophie Delseries
Costumes : Clara René
Musique : Pascal Bideau
Son : Roman Dymny, Marc Von Stürler et Béatrice Wick
Montage : Anne Souriau
Mathematics advisor : Ariane Mézard
    Distribution
Ella Rumpf : Marguerite Hoffmann
Jean-Pierre Darroussin : Laurent Werner, son directeur de thèse
Clotilde Courau : Suzanne
Julien Frison : Lucas Savelli
Sonia Bonny : Noa
Cheng Xiaoxing (crédité Maurice Cheng) : M. Kong
Idir Azougli : Yanis
Camille de Sablet : la formatrice
Édouard Sulpice : un élève
Yun-Ping He : un adversaire du mah-jong
Karl Ruben Noel : le danseur
Ava Baya : la petite amie du danseur
Gauthier Boxebeld : le manager
Leila Muse : la journaliste
Esdras Registe : le collègue
Dominique Ratonnat : le professeur
Capucine Chappey : l'amie anglophone de Lucas
    Le tournage a, entre autres, lieu à Paris pour l'École normale supérieure (ENS) de l'université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL), en mai 2022. Filming locations also include: Chinatown Belleville (Paris) and Lausanne.
    Soundtrack selections include "Misirlou" (trad. from the Eastern Mediterranean Ottoman Empire, first recorded in 1927 in Greece), played by the math students' brass band.
    Langue originale : français
    Durée : 112 minutes
    Genre : comédie dramatique
    Sociétés de distribution : Pyramide Distribution (France) et Outside The Box (Suisse).
    Dates de sortie :
France : 22 mai 2023 (Festival de Cannes) ; 1er novembre 2023 (sortie nationale)
Suisse romande : 15 novembre 2023
Finnish premiere: 3 May 2024 - released by Cinema Mondo - Finnish / Swedish subtitles by Outi Kainulainen / Joanna Erkkilä.
    Viewed at Finnkino Tennispalatsi 14, Helsinki, Saturday 4 May 2024.

Synopsis from the press kit: " The future of Marguerite, a brilliant student in Mathematics at the prestigious École Normale Supérieure, seems all planned out. The only woman from her promo, she is finishing a thesis she has to expose to an audience of researchers. On D-day, a mistake shakes all her certainties and her foundations collapse. Marguerite decides to quit everything to start all over again. "

AA: Anna Novion's Marguerite's Theorem is a rewarding and original contribution to films about scientists, evoking from recent memory works such as The Universal Theory, The Imitation Game, The Theory of Everything and A Beautiful Mind. Most of all I was thinking about Oppenheimer

Like The Universal Theory, Marguerite's Theorem is a fictional tale about fictional people, but reportedly it does not stray far from reality. The story is based on solid expertise provided by the mathematics advisor Ariane Mézard. The problems discussed are real: Goldbach's conjenture and Szemerédi's theorem and regularity lemma. I don't understand a word of what they are saying, but apparently we may see on the screen elements to real and new solutions. A documentary element is the real location of the fabled École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in Paris where much of the action takes place.

It is an exciting story and also a psychological coming of age story. Marguerite Hoffmann (Ella Rumpf) is a mathematical genius who has come far in solving the most difficult problem: Goldbach's conjecture. Her professor Laurent Werner (Jean-Pierre Darroussin) takes a new student working with the same problem, Lucas Savelli (Julien Frison). Marguerite is hurt and jealous.  In a crucial demonstration, Lucas exposes a mistake of hers. She is paralyzed, breaks down and abandons everything. She behaves childishly and immaturely. She blames Laurent and Lucas for scheming behind her back. She even lies to her mother, a math teacher. She cannot face failure. Werner advises her to take responsibility and move on. Everybody makes mistakes. Everybody fails. He also teaches Marguerite that mathematics is not a solo venture.

Marguerite has always been the star pupil at the expense of living the normal life of a young woman. Having left mathematics behind, she becomes the housemate of a young dancer, Noa (Sonia Bonny) and wakes up at night to the sound of her orgasm on the other side of the wall. Marguerite has never had one. Aroused, she visits a bar in Noa's company and picks up a man "just for recreation". She takes a job at a sports store. In dire financial straits, she becomes a gambler in illegal mahjong dens. The new impulses, also including dancing, awaken her and give her fresh ideas.

Laurent warns Marguerite not to blend sentiment with mathematics. Marguerite's progress has become twisted because she has sacrificed everything for science. And because she was not living the life of a full human being, she was needlessly vulnerable in accidents. Opening to life outside mathematics, Marguerite becomes a better mathematician. Together with Lucas, Marguerite embarks on new directions and they become a wonderful team because they are different but committed to the same goal.

I was thinking about Oppenheimer, because it is the first Christopher Nolan movie with sex. I found it essential to the fabula. On that level of intellect, struggling with problems transcending the limits of understanding, it is possible to become too narrow-focused and thereby deranged. Sex, among other qualities, is a liberator, a power reset of mind and body and the ultimate stimulus. There is no mind without body. Mens sana in corpore sano. And there is no good sex without love. Marguerite's Theorem is a saga about the triumph of the spirit in harmony with the body - with life - with love.

Oppenheimer, too, was a celebration of team work - perhaps the greatest I can think of (I mean the movie and even more the book on which it is based). Oppenheimer himself is not the supreme genius. Unlike many in his team he never got the Nobel Prize. But he was the one who had talent to recognize talent and organize the world-changing enterprise in nuclear science.
  
BEYOND THE JUMP BREAK: FROM THE PRESS KIT: