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Diverse Standouts From Strong New Directors/New Films Selections

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  • Diverse Standouts From Strong New Directors/New Films Selections

    Indie Wire
    March 24 2004

    Diverse Standouts Emerge From Strong New Directors/New Films
    Selections

    by Howard Feinstein


    A scene from Jim McKay's "Everyday People," which will open the 33rd
    New Directors/New Films series.

    The 33rd edition of New Directors/New Films, MoMA and the Film
    Society of Lincoln Center's series that runs today through April 4,
    offers the finest selections in recent years. Especially not to be
    missed are a feature from Armenia and a short from Peru -- and these
    are just two of the standouts. The short is called "Porter" (I prefer
    the Spanish title, which translates to "Only a Porter"), and it's
    directed by New York-based Peruvian director Juan Alejandro Ramirez.
    (It plays with "Kounandi," a nice feature about village jealousy from
    Burkina Faso.) "Porter" feels like a documentary: A peasant, Chuqui
    Orozco, who makes his meager living carrying gringos' gear up and
    down the Andes mountains, tells us in voiceover his observations of
    those around him of higher rank in such a stratified society, as well
    as his acceptance of his lowly place in the hierarchy. Ramirez says
    he was inspired by stories he was told in southern Peru, but for
    greater veracity, he consolidates them and stages the shoot.

    Hiner Saleem is a refugee from Iraqi Kurdistan, now living in France,
    who shot "Vodka Lemon" in Armenia. Not surprisingly, his protagonist
    is a Kurd, Hamo, a poor widower living in a snowy village. Two of his
    sons have moved away in an attempt to further their fortunes; only
    his drunken son Dilovan and his beloved granddaughter remain. During
    his daily visits to the cemetery where his wife is buried, Hamo
    meets, and begins an affair with, an even poorer widow, Nina. Hamo
    shleps into town to sell old wardrobes and his tv, while Nina sells a
    drink called vodka lemon in a roadside kiosk. An economic cloud hangs
    over the entire film, but Saleem's deft use of magical realism -- a
    bed and a piano glide along the icy road, horses fly through the
    frame -- adds an enchanting edge.

    Three of the finest films have at their center fully-realized
    females. In fact, two of them are directed by women. Sabiha Sumar, a
    Pakistani filmmaker residing in Germany, sets her brilliant "Silent
    Waters" in the Pakistani Punjab in 1979, just as a nation under
    martial law is on the verge of becoming an Islamic state. Ayesha is a
    Muslim widow in the village of Charkhi who scrapes by on her
    husband's pension and earnings from teaching the Koran to young
    girls. Her 18-year-old son, Saleem, is a nice, well-behaved boy and
    the apple of her eye. Once he gets involved with some Muslim
    fundamentalists, however, he rejects his girlfriend and even turns
    away from his uncomprehending mother. We realize after occasional
    striking flashbacks that she had suffered somehow during the nasty
    1947 partition that carved up India into Muslim-dominated Pakistan
    and predominantly Hindu India. At the time of the fighting, Sikhs and
    Muslims were forcing their single women to kill themselves to protect
    family honor, and those that got away were abducted. When Sikh
    pilgrims come to Charkhi for their annual pilgrimage, Ayesha's secret
    surfaces, with tragic consequences.

    Given the general state of moviemaking in Western Europe, the Swiss
    film "Strong Shoulders" by the female director Ursula Meier is a
    revelation. Although it is formally cinematic, it was, surprisingly,
    made for television. Meier focuses on Sabine, a 15-year-old
    obsessive, ambitious runner who attends a special school for
    athletes. They are preparing for a major track-and-field meet. She
    does not get along with her coach, because he frustrates her desire
    to run with the boys. She has no qualms about using anyone, her
    girlfriends or a young runner named Rudi, to further her ambitions;
    she is left almost totally alone. Her self-absorption is so extreme
    that her action at the eagerly awaited event is so unexpected that
    you are left breathless.



    A scene from "Vodka Lemon" by Hiner Saleem, one of the standout
    selections at the 33rd New Directors/New Films. Photo courtesy Film
    Society of Lincoln Center.

    In the Chilean film "B-Happy," 14-year-old Manuela becomes
    increasingly isolated. Director Gonzalo Justiniano emphasizes the
    point by surrounding every scene with a slow fade to black, a device
    that lovingly softens her youthful existential dilemma. That her
    ne'er-do-well father is in prison makes her the black sheep at her
    provincial school; only one handsome newcomer shows her any
    affection, and even that leads to a one-afternoon stand. Her mother
    dies. Her closeted brother leaves town. She goes to work for the same
    abusive grocer for whom her mom had worked. It's all too much, and
    she flees to the city, where she searches for her father and, out of
    money, becomes a streetwalker.

    Some of the most astounding movies take place in the world's
    flashpoints. Jehane Noujaim's haunting documentary "Control Room,"
    which deals with American control of the media during the invasion of
    Iraq and offers an inside look at the Arab TV broadcaster Al-Jazeera,
    has been written about extensively out of Sundance. The others are
    "Fuse," a fiction film from Bosnia, and "Checkpoint," an Israeli doc.

    In "Fuse," director Pjer Zalica concocts a fluid political satire
    that captures the dark humor and sarcasm that is endemic in the
    Balkans. It's a given that the postwar mixture of Serbs, Muslims, and
    Croats is not going smoothly. In the film's Muslim town of Tesanj,
    the mayor calls for a major overhaul: Bill Clinton will be visiting.
    Not only does the town leader push what is mostly a fake
    rapprochement with a neighboring Serb town ("I need Serbs!"), but he
    also calls for an end to corruption. Smugglers and pimps must hide
    their wares, or at least turn them into something more palatable.
    Zalica foregrounds an elderly, deranged, retired police chief, one of
    whose sons died in the war, and another of his sons, a fireman. When
    the motorcade arrives, it is the old man who has the last word.

    "Checkpoint," on the other hand, eschews humor. Filmmaker Yoav
    Shamir, a former Israeli soldier, shoots Israelis on duty at a
    variety of checkpoints in the Occupied Territories, both the West
    Bank and the Gaza Strip. He also films the Palestinians who are at
    their mercy. Shamir's access is unbelievable. You see that most of
    the combatants are very young and very, very bored. Out of ennui,
    hubris, and racism-this is all in the film-you see them wield their
    power over the hapless travelers like a sword. "Let them wait," says
    one soldier. People, cars, and trucks often wait for hours, even in
    the rain and snow, just to get to their home cities or villages. One
    young man at the Kalandia-Ramallah main entrance tells Shamir, "All
    of Ramallah are animals: monkeys, dogs. We are human." Whether these
    checkpoints serve much of a purpose is arguable. As one waiting
    Palestinian says on camera, "Terrorists don't come through the
    roadblocks."

    http://www.indiewire.com/onthescene/onthescene_040324newd.html
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