My friend Lewis Rose is the director of this video for Hervé's "Bang the Drum". Moody, sleazy, funny.
"Nothing bothers some people. Not even flying saucers." - The Beast of Yucca Flats
Wednesday, 29 June 2016
Amusements
Various links:
The art of Fortunio Liceti:
Interview with "Embrace of the Serpent" director Ciro Guerra.
A brief history of horror...
The art of Fortunio Liceti:
Serious chat about trivial things: Graphic Policy Radio talk "Captain America: Civil War"
Interview with "Embrace of the Serpent" director Ciro Guerra.
A brief history of horror...
Labels:
art,
Captain America: Civil War,
Embrace of the Serpent,
horror,
links
Saturday, 25 June 2016
Straight on till Morning
Peter Collinson,
1972, UK
Peter Collinson’s* ‘Straight on till Morning’ is a totally
different creature to ‘Fear in the Night’, the film it was doubled up with under
the “Women in Peril” strapline. It’s like Hammer as filtered through Nicolas
Roeg and Harold Pinter and owes far more to ‘Peeping Tom’ than Hitchcock or Robert Bloch. This is no bad thing.
It is a flawed but fascinating chamber piece whose cross-cutting to other
tangential and related scenes broadens this serial killer story into a story of
how girls get lost in post-Sixties London culture. 1970’s ‘Permissive’ provides another example of this Little Girl Lost scenario.
Public humiliation
and the retreat into fantasy underlies the odyssey of ugly duckling Rite Tushingham
as she tries her luck in the big bad world to look for someone to make her a
mother. This leads her to pretty boy Peter’s neverland, at the end of a road
straight out of ‘Coronation Street’
and British neo-realism. In Peter’s world, beauty is rewarded with murder. Shane
Briant plays Peter with a mixture of aloofness, poses, articulate gentleness
and eloquent bullying. It’s best when Briant reveals through expression how
immature, confused and bewildered Peter is. We don’t know why he does what he
does, and it is obvious that neither does he.
The undeniably
bleak, cruel and nihilistic qualities of the film have brought it some vitriol
and dismissal, which reminds me of reaction to Nicolas Roeg’s ‘Bad Timing’, and both are open to
accusations of misogyny and outright cruelty. Even if the Peter Pan allusions
don’t quite take flight, ‘Straight on till Morning’ has much say on the random mercilessness of the world and the
hopes and dreams of normalcy that take people there. It is genuinely disturbing
and troubling long after it has finished, and there really aren’t Hammer films
one can say that about.
* Probably best known as the
director of ‘The Italian Job’.
Fear in the Night
Jimmy Sangster, 1972, UK

Hard to be a God
Trudno byt bogom
Aleksei German, 2013, Russia
‘Hard
to be a God’ falls somewhere between Tarkovsky and ‘Zardoz’. By which I mean it contains leanings towards brilliance,
campness, pretentiousness, indulgence, uniqueness, something genuinely bonkers.
The comparison with Tarkovesky isn’t a stretch at all since since ‘Stalker’ was based on the book ‘Roadside Picnic’ by the same authors, Arkady
and Boris Strugatsky: ‘Hard to be a God’ is based upon their 1964 novel. And ‘Stalker’
provides a good example of the science fiction of ‘Hard to be a God’ which is free of any visual
clues that might obvious symbolise an otherworldly setting. There are no
futuristic vistas, for example, no alien designs; just people saying and acting
bizarre things(although you may note that the costume Don Rumata wears looks
like the remains of a spacesuit). It was directed by Alexei German and
completed by his son Alexei German Jnr upon his father’s death in 2013.
It’s a medieval science-fiction
scenario, which you can’t say about too many films, in which a group of
astronauts have landed on a planet that seems trapped in its Dark Ages, bent on
killing anyone they deem intellectual. This is why people act like “The Fool”
from a play, with added killing. These astronauts aren’t meant to interfere
with the development of this society but, of course, they do and have. One, calling
himself Don Rumata (Leonid Yarmolnik), is already bearing a “Godlike” status
simply because he is more focused and alert in a land of violent idiots. This therefore
makes him more successful in his violent outbursts even as he loses himself to
the cacophony of squalor and craziness all around him as he tries to blend in. The
fact that he has apparently gone so successfully native is another reason it
may be hard to distinguish the sci-fi basis as he behaves much like those
around him.

But that is the meat of this, for the
story takes secondary importance to the catalogue of grime and cruelty. It is a
treatise on man’s penchant for stupidity and barbarism, even as it indulges in
a feudal social structure. IMDB quotes a synopsis by Svetlana Karmalita for the
Rome Film Festival that says,
This
is not a film about cruelty, but about love. A love that was there, tangible,
alive, and that resisted through the hardest of conditions.
But it is about cruelty, surely, as
to deny this is to ignore a central ingredient; and it is not so much about ‘love
conquering in the worst of times’ as showing a context where affection doesn’t
stand a chance. It is about bringing to life a crazed crowded scenario that you
might find in classic, renowned paintings. It is about failure; it is about how
religion and blind faith can facilitate malice and obstruct progress. It is
about the failure of colonisation and where the native culture is too
overbearing to be changed by one man, no matter a self-proclaimed God.
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
Embrace of the Serpent
El abrazo de la serpiente
Ciro Guerra, 2015, Columbia-Venezela-Argentina
Ciro Guella’s film is a mesmerising journey into a long dead world of an Amazon in the midst of colonialism, based upon diaries by scientists Theodor Koch-Grunberg and Richard Evan Schultes. Naturally ‘Heart of Darkness’ and the films of Werner Herzog will come to mind , but there is a formal elegance, uncanniness and style here that has little to do with Herzog’s more neo-realist aesthetic. Gorgeous and haunting vistas of black and white cinematography by David Gallego segue into one another, occasionally crossing timeframes to tell the tale.
An ailing explorer (Jan Bijvoet) goes into the Amazon jungle and enlists the help of a native, Karamakate (Nilbio Torres and Antonio Boliar) to find a legendary flower, supposedly capable of curing disease. Years later, another explorer with the same objective also enlists the older Karamakate’s assistance, sparking memories even though Karamakate has forgotten some of the rituals he used to know.

Karamakate proves a fascinating character that easily quashes apparent “noble savage” archetypes, a character resistant to typical Western interpretations, always critical of other Amazonians that have befriended the white man. The importance of this film giving a rare voice to the Amazonian tribes-people has been officially recognised as it
bears tragic witness to colonial atrocities that have ravaged natural resources, devastated indigenous populations, and broken a link between ancient wisdom and Western man's exploitive madness. Accordingly, the Governor of the Guainía Department, one of the locations used for the film, decorated Ciro Guerra with the Order of the Inrida Flower for “exalting the respect and value of the indigenous populations, likewise giving the Department recognition for tourism and culture.”
A haunting and haunted world is evoked and alienation is a near tangible thing, not only in Karamakate’s isolation from the world as the last survivor of his tribe, but also in the Spanish mission’s decent into madness. Karamakate does not appear to have let loneliness and isolation bring on such madness: he is clear of thinking and opinion and radiates a natural pride. He goes on the white men’s excursions for his own reasons and makes little concession to them.
Time is fluid as the narrative slides from past to present, via as much by the river as by memory. By putting the past foremost the film puts it on an equal level with its present rather than relegating it to “flashback”. Although the editing does not fracture time and find associations and symbolisms by juxtapositions in the style of Nicolas Roeg – ‘Walkabout’, say – Guerra exhibits a similar awareness of the bond between editing and time. By the time it seems to go a little ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ (it’s only colour sequence), it has long been evident that ‘Embrace of the Serpent’ is also about film as a transcendent, hallucinogenic experience. It’s a film that evokes memories, dreams, the fluidity of time and a lost culture and refreshingly seems scornful of traditional white narrative norms.
Beautiful, strange, tapping into the potential for film to give voice to everyone, even those long gone. An exceptional achievement.
Labels:
colonialism,
Embrace of the Serpent,
Historical Drama,
trippy
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
The War
Jon Avnet, 1994, US
Elijah Wood gets top billing, even over Kevin Costner, as a boy who
builds a tree-house. The tree-house and his long-running feud with the kids of
another family are a metaphor for war, and Vietnam in particular. ‘The War’ starts promisingly, although
loaded with rites-of-passage clichés, such as The Summer That Changed Everything...
The all-wise nostalgic voice-over... children dancing to songs a’la 'Stand By Me'... It also bears the
flashbacks, dead friends and guilt of Vietnam movies. Costner is the Vietnam
veteran, back from hospital and a breakdown, full of war stories that have
driven him into pacifist principles. Costner ends up too earnest; ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ still offers the
best “good dad of (Southern) peace” archetype, but unlike Atticus, this dad can
still be relied upon to use violence when his son is threatened. And so many
conservative mythologies are tediously re-enforced, such as the dead that
become guardian angels and wishes that come true, etc.
Mostly, despite some appealing moments, the film suffers from a lack of
subtlety. A racist teacher is a caricature out of a Joe Dante satire and is
treated to a long, unbelievably uninterrupted rebuke from the sassy black girl
she picks upon. In fact, the underused black characters have the best
personalities, where the adults are a bit too earnest and the kids don’t get to
breath from under the contrived scenerios. The building of and the fight for
the tree-house also promises more than is delivered, accompanied by an
appealing seventies soundtrack left over from an ‘80s ‘Nam film. Slowly the
film descends into predictability and, for the last half an hour, is almost
unforgivably patronising and obvious: for example, there is no need for the
sound of helicopters over the battle for the tree-house to make the point.
Although there is nothing truly disagreeable with Avnet’s film, its earnestness and self-importance work finally to undermine its strengths and to waste Costner at his most appealing and a cast of highly talented child actors (the wonderful Lucas Black – Caleb Temple from the TV series ‘American Gothic’ – has an all too brief showstopper when he beats up the bigger Wood with a devil’s shit-eating grin). almost unforgivably pat, and conservative in its resolution, the War unfortunately shoots itself in the foot, ending up neither a knowing children’s film with adult themes or an adult film with something new to say about childhood.
Friday, 3 June 2016
Warcraft: the beginning
Duncan Jones, 2016, USA-China
Of course, there was a lot of goodwill
towards Duncan Jones after ‘Moon’ and
‘Source Code’, but I don’t think
goodwill has a chance of elevating ‘Warcraft’
into some fantasy classic. There is a sense that supporters are desperately
trying to make excuses. My first doubts
came instantaneously with the first shot of the orcs. You know how games have
become almost like films? Here’s a film that looks like a game. There is
something about the orcs, their design and execution, that means they generally
remain unconvincing throughout. If this had been wholly animated, that would
not have been a problem, would have been as aesthetic, but being placed in real
locations against real actors does not enhance their credibility. But then
again, the human actors fair no better and being placed aside orcs shows up how
miscast and weak they are. Dominic Cooper as King Llane seems particularly unconvincing.
It’s like the joint fantasy of a group of kids playing dress-up who just happen
to look like competent actors in their imaginations. Yes, just like role-playing.

Where it wins is in a sturdy vision of
its female characters – they may be fewer but they are every bit as useful and
formidable as the males – and, even better, in giving the orcs characters nuance
instead of just letting them be faceless villainous hoards. It starts with an
orc couple worrying about their offspring after all, which is surely
refreshing. This is why they are more interesting than the wet side dishes of
human characters. It goes some way to humanising the inhuman “other”. Even so,
the orcs come dangerously close to turning into ‘Shrek’. And there isn’t much to the special effects when they all
appear to be CGI without much ingenuity in individual moments. It’s all *smash
& angst* without really being engaging.

Saturday, 28 May 2016
Suddenly
Lewis Allen, 1954, USA
In a little, sleepy,
Republican town of Suddenly, a officer pauses to share a joke with someone
passing through that “things happen so slow now, the town councilor’s figuring
to change the town’s name to Gradually.” But it’s name comes from a time when
it was a wilder place of gamblers, road agents, gunfighters, probably
prostitutes, that kind of thing; the kind of people that make things happen ‘suddenly’.
It shouldn’t be forgotten what kind of wildness built the town.
It’s a regular ol’ day in Suddenly. The most
conflict seems to be when Sheriff Tod Shaw has a little tiff with the female
that he is after, Ellen Benson, because he buys her son “Pidge” a cap gun when
she has expressly forbid it. She is still grieving for the loss of her husband
in the war, you see, and abhors symbols of violence. Oh, he explains that it’s
not the weapon and it’s the man, et cetera, et cetera, but she isn’t having any
of it. The Sheriff’s affinity with violence seems also to be one of the reasons
she is playing hard to get. Her father-in-law is also tired of Ellen’s
anti-violence moaning. She is, after all, just a woman and doesn’t understand
that there is horror and Evil in the world that can only be resolved and fended
off with counter-violence. But not to worry: her silly, womanly anxieties and
philosophies will soon be shown up for the bunk they are when three hoodlums
take over the family house for a plot to assassinate the President of the
United States who is apparently - or suddenly as it may be - passing through.
What follows is a little chamber piece in which decent people and hoodlums
argue it all out whilst they wait for the assassination attempt.


As a drama centred around
sofas and windows it has the feel of an expanded play, although there is
nothing wrong with that, with competent if uninventive direction by Lewis
Allen, a director of the era’s stalwart TV series. The play with the cap gun
and the television set is quite neatly handled, right under the assassins’
noses, and the ending - and we’re never in doubt as to the how things will turn
out - gives both “Pidge” and Ellen a chance to resolve issues with a firearm.
That’ll learn’em. And later, it will be the Sheriff playing hard to get and
Ellen doing the chasing. That’ll teach her.
Labels:
black and white,
crime thriller,
drama,
Funny Games,
gangsters
Friday, 27 May 2016
The Haunting in Connecticut
Peter Cornwell, 2009, USA-Canada
The opening credits
of Peter Cornwell’s haunted/possessed
house film are an example of the problem of Twenty-First Century supernatural
horrors. It starts with a gallery of old black-and-white photographs, pictures
of families posing with their dead loved ones in the style of old mementoes.
However, this is broken up by flashes of running blood, all red and
here-and-now. It is as if the film is anxious about holding the attention
without the promise of contemporary gore. Tales of hauntings subsist on
atmosphere and build-up, on the slow seeping in, of an unsettling ambience and
the character of a troubled building and, usually, correspondingly troubled
characters. It seems to be that the tempo of contemporary film-making and
modern editing trends is all wrong for a successful supernatural horror. This
tempo is so hungry for and anxious about holding audience attention, the
audience attention-span being taken as uniformly and shockingly short, that it
is oblivious to build-up and ambience. We are barely ten minutes in before we
have our first fake-shock courtesy of a dream. This is unnecessary: the film
does not know that simply having big, locked, imposing doors in the basement
are enough to generate the creeps once our unfortunate protagonist decides to
use the basement for a bedroom (!). Perhaps I am being unfair: a film like
Fulci’s “The House by the
Cemetery” has little rhythm, but it
does somehow generate atmosphere and is redeemed by a couple of key set pieces,
mainly the cellar denouement. Perhaps then “The Haunting in Connecticut” will pull a similar stunt.

There is family
interaction winningly modelled on examples such as “Poltergeist” and the performances are all fine, considering the
material given. Such schlock often benefits from seasoned actors, but what
Virginia Madsen, Martin Donovan and Elias Koteas are doing here other than
picking up a pay check is the film’s real mystery.
Well, that and why after experiencing terrifying supernatural phenomenon, the
family doesn’t just leave. Koteas’ character - a minister also suffering from cancer -
is especially silly, reeking more of deux
ex machina than genuine character.
The film exhibits ickiness
concerning death: a funeral home is obviously an undesirable building and host
to all manner of angry spirits; the good family tries to keep bad things away
with prayers. Surely this is a product of the side of American culture that has
such difficulty dealing with death. It is ironic that so often with horrors
that are so softly religious in a Judeo-Christian manner that prayers are
inevitably all part of the creepiness, even as they are calling on the
supernatural to provide solace and justice in life. Ghost stories often distrust
the past, presenting it as a dangerous place, but ghost stories are also about
grief and loss. But “The Haunting in Connecticut” is having no truck with death. Indeed, our
cancer-ridden hero survives, returns from the dead even, fully recovered from
terminal illness. All you need are God’s mysterious ways,
which apparently involve a violent haunting, grave robbing and necromancy and a
heavy dose of sentimentality. Yes, a haunting cures cancer. It’s an insultingly
juvenile vision of mortality and one heavily mired in a denial that I am not
even sure the film-makers care about.
To call this
muddled, ridiculous and most of all grotesquely offensive is an understatement.
If the Horror genre is chiefly concerned with death in all its guises and our
fantasies for it, rarely has a religious horror film gone about so nakedly denying
its omnipotence. And not for one minute
would I entertain this as a “true story”.
Wednesday, 25 May 2016
Accident
Joseph Losey, 1967, UK
A droll dark comedy of manners and coolly detached condemnation of the infidelities, arrogance, indifference and debauchery of the academia. Director Joseph Losey’s fascination with and attention to the English class systems reaps great rewards, combining with “The Servant” and “The Go-Between” to produce a fascinating exploration of status, repression, cricket greens and beige rooms.
Misogyny, patriarchy and classism saturate everything, right up to the heady heights of the Oxford University Philosophy faculty. Here, Dirk Bogarde completes another brilliant portrayal of studied mannerisms, slowly giving way to something far more primal and despairing. The longing that he and his immediate male social circle has for a particular student, seemingly a princess, undoes everyone. Male desire is a fragile thing and they aren’t very mature about it, for all their careful affectations of decorum, aloofness and intelligence. How so very clever they are in their suppressed jealousies, in how they talk openly about their infidelities and their little love triangle. The professors do not think the young stud Michael York has a chance in the winning, but not one of them is really getting to the heart of the princess. She is a catalyst, an intangible object of desire, a gorgeous young woman, but barely a personality. This is rather the effect of her status in a patriarchal society rather than a failing of the source novel “Accident” by Nicholas Losey or Harold Pinter’s typically excellent and slightly abstract screenplay.

Otherwise, a lot of the loose-limbed feel, the naturalism matched by precise editing feels decidedly French New Wave… But the acting is particularly English in its approach, its stately cadence. Bogarde, York and Stanley Baker are all excellent, exploring this slightly odd world. As with the New Wave, the pure sensation is probably greater than the story, which in truth is a slight thing. As with the other Losey-Pinter films of this period, part of the achievement is in feeling that a mystery of English behaviour has been both confronted and found essentially impenetrable and repellent. This remains a haunting and compelling quality and evidence of much of the brilliance of a film like “Accident”.
Wednesday, 18 May 2016
An American Werewolf in London
John Landis, 1981, UK/USA
I first saw ‘An American
Werewolf in London' in 1983 in the film marquee of what was then known as the C.N.D.
Glastonbury festival. I was just about a teenager and far more interested in
the mysteries of film than music at that age and spent most of my time alone,
sitting on the grass (no seating), watching most of the films in the film
marquee. There was ‘Zardoz’, which I already knew and really liked (I
was quite baffled why the audience burst out laughing at the big reveal
concerning a famous novel). ‘Woodstock’ was shown (it was a
C.N.D. festival, after all), and I remember being piqued that the guy in front
of me intended to play his bongos throughout the entire screening. There was ‘The
Blues Brothers’ too, but I was not so interested in that.
I had met up with some other
kid at some point and we had one of those friendships that lasted just one
evening. I think I was the one who said we should watch ‘An American
Werewolf in London’; I was certainly aware of it and its frightening
reputation, as it was only a year or two old. We were immediately terrified and
traumatised by the early moors scene and proceeded to experience the whole
thing with our backs to the screen, taking turns to check out whether the scary
scenes had finished yet. So in the end, we really didn’t get to see the whole
thing. The next day, free to wander at my leisure, I tried to find the caravan
where my ‘werewolf’ friend said he was, but his directions had been vague and I
was too shy to knock on doors to see if he was staying behind any of them. So
we never met again, and I wonder if he remembers that first experience of “American
Werewolf” too. It must surely have been my initiation into a more extreme
form of horror. This, and ‘Eraserhead’ at a little while later (but that’s
another story). And ‘American Werewolf’ was
the very first VHS tape I owned, though I am not sure how I got hold of it as I
hadn’t reach its ‘18’ demands at that time.
So jump forward decades
later (2012 or thereabouts) and I get to see ‘An American Werewolf in London’
for a second time on the big screen, courtesy of one of those welcome
aberrations in mainstream chain cinema schedules where they actually screen an
old film. Firstly, the new digital restoration really does justice to the soft
tones and colours of the opening moors scenes. The tongue-in-cheek soundtrack
is still a joy with its retro moon-related songs. It is still quite nasty and
extreme in its gore. The initially violent mauling on the moors and Jack’s
(Griffin Dunne) ghoulish deterioration are still capable of inducing
squeamishness. I had seen ‘American
Werewolf’ many, many times - happily into double digits - but it had been a
while since I last viewed it. It is one of those films I know back-to-front;
yes it is a favourite. But what struck me this time was just how many iconic
scenes the film has – or maybe I just felt that way because I knew it so well.
There’s the hapless New York backpackers’ visit to “The Slaughtered Lamb” and
the moors werewolf attack; the still absolutely terrifying and upsetting
Nazi-monster family massacre dream sequence (which takes place whilst ‘The Muppets’ plays on the TV, keeping up with the
mismatched elements that run throughout the film); the infamous transformation,
which gleefully renders the agony of the metamorphosis; then there’s the
hilarious porn cinema sequence and the brutal, shocking Piccadilly Circus vehicle
smash-up that closes the film.
Although Landis’ direction
is deceptively unfussy, closer inspection reveals some excellent choices in
pacing, execution and framing. For example: the soft fade into 'The Muppets' that sneakily seems to signal the passing of time to somewhere safe to reassure the audience when it is instead a segue into a nightmare. The balance between casual and slightly more
goofy humour (the incompetent police investigator, for example) and straight-up
horror alone is wonderful and assured. Rarely does a horror-comedy hold
together humour and horror so well; there is no sense of self-referential
parody here, and the tongue-in-check elements are kept to the details rather
than the core of the drama. The romance is light and, thanks to the immediate
affable charms of David Naughton and the gorgeous Jenny Agutter, more endearing
and convincingthan it probably has the right to be.


The first true reveal of the
beast rampage is brilliantly framed: from the top of an escalator in a London
underground station, we look down as the werewolf slowly wanders in from the top
of the frame. It is revealed in the clear, slightly sickly, cold glare of a
very public space; convincing in its movements, unnerving in size. This remains
one of my favourite shots in the whole film. Landis manages to offer plenty of
excellent views of the thing - chowing down in the cinema and running through
Piccadilly Circus - without giving away too much for too long so that the
viewer’s imagination still gets the opportunity to expand and imagine for
themselves. There is the sense that, because Landis holds back so often, each
viewing of the monster is a real treat. It’s a great creation and rarely
bettered. One of the best ever put to screen. (Even the cover lose-up can still
unsettle me.)


Labels:
Adventures in Film,
favourites,
horror,
monster movies,
soundtracks,
werewolf
Sunday, 8 May 2016
Jumanji
Joe Johnston, 1995, US
Based on Chris Van Allsburg's book, like all the best children’s fantasies ‘Jumanji’ threatens to turn very nasty at any moment once the children are called by the eponymous boardgame. Rolling the dice, they have to confront its malevolent jungle forces that break out into the real world. First up in 1969, bullied rich kid Alan (Adam Hann-Byrd), having argued with his somewhat wealthily conservative parents, hears the drums of the game calling him and promptly disappears for the next twenty six years. He turns up then when orphaned Peter (Bradley Pierce) and Judy (Kirsten Dunst) move into the house with their aunt and discover the game, only to start up Alan’s game again. This time, though, Alan has turned into Robin Williams, in another of his Peter Pan guises. Luckily, Williams is never allowed to overwhelm the proceedings and pretty soon there are ‘Gremlins’-like monkeys and stampedes of animals tearing up the surrounding town.

But more than all this, ‘Jumanji’ is a special effects film and they are impressive – by Industrial Light and Magic’s and Amalgamated Dynamics - although of course they are of the time. They stay just the right side of neo-realism, they are just a touch cartoony, so that all the animals remain the conjuring of the game, of an alternative reality. Best of all is the stampede and Williams sinking into floorboards like quicksand whilst beset by giant spiders. And although it’s played as a punishment, little Peter surely lives out a boy’s fantasy when turning into a monkey.
Reasonably scary and spectacular, ‘Jumanji’ is decent, slightly alternative family entertainment.
• Of course, there was ‘Zathura’ in 2015 which was seen as a kind-of sequel, being of the same idea, and at time of writing a remake/reboot of ‘Jumanji’ is pending.
Saturday, 7 May 2016
Alamar (To The Sea)
Pedro González-Rubio, 2009, Mexico
Films are often criticised for not having enough plot: for example would be ‘The Revenant’ and ‘The Raid’, as if cinema is only at the mercy of drama. But these films are about other things upon which a familiar premise is but a coat-hanger (execution and acting in the former; fighting in the latter); you could even say it about ‘Victoria’ (execution and acting). Sometimes a film might feel improved if it had more plot, or rather more originality in the writing – say, ‘Hardcore Henry’. But sometimes the visuals can be enough.

The film has a documentary style in its matter-of-factness, but the visuals are gorgeous because what it is looking at is abundant natural beauty. It’s a home-movie of a gorgeous holiday or perhaps a ‘National Geographic’ article come to life. It captures a mood, a fleeting happiness and beauty. It leaves many questions unanswered but this is not a film of answers. Rather, it implies the continuous nature of emotional response in that it does not bestow Natan immediately with reflective sadness for a lost paradise when he returns home to his mother in Rome –after all, he is only five – but perhaps the value of this time with his father will reveal such reflections as he grows up. It is perhaps nice, for once, just to wallow in a mood of a moment without the demands and tensions of drama.
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