CPH:DOX 2017 /The Festival

It’s spring, 1st of March, from where I sit in Copenhagen it’s cloudy and windy but milder. I have the window open. It’s spring and the CPH:DOX festival announced its program at noon today. The festival has moved to March and the festival main venue has moved. CPH:DOX will have what they call a Festival Palace at the Charlottenborg on Kongens Nytorv next to the Royal Theatre (the classic, not the new at the harbour). Here will be cinemas, exhibitions, a five day conference, concerts and parties, café and restaurant and much much more. The headquarter in other words. In one of the central squares of Copenhagen.

The website is up and running, the programme newspaper can be downloaded, I guess there will be banners round the city if they are not there yet… and there will be screenings outside Copenhagen, more than 100 it is written in the press material.

More than 200 films with 75 world premieres.

Dates: March 16-26.

Ambition – to be ”more than a festival”, quote from the website’s ”About Us”:

”During the eleven days of the festival, CPH:DOX also presents concerts, art exhibitions, five whole days of professional seminars, a screening market, and the international financing and co-production event CPH:FORUM, as well as the film production program CPH:LAB and much more.

CPH:DOX wants to be the best film festival in and for the world. We insist on freeing the transformative potential of art and documentary films, that is the potential to have a direct impact on the social context. The appealing form of the documentary films allows for the communication of complicated problems in an intimate, reflective and profound manner. And no matter whether the topic is political, philosophical, experimental or focused on a narrow section of the world, documentary film expands and questions the viewer’s conception of the world. But CPH:DOX doesn’t just show documentary films – we anchor them in social context through debates, artist talks, events and masterclasses. In the hope of creating real social transformation, CPH:DOX establishes a space for reflection, dialogue and opinion across the population, and with that making sure that the films and the problems they pose stay with the viewers long after they leave the cinema.”

A manifesto!

https://cphdox.dk/en/

CPH:DOX 2017 /Films

It’s very easy if you want to see what will be shown at the festival. Go to the website, link below, and you will see the many sections arranged by the programmers. The classical ones are there like Dox:Award, New:Vision Award, the F:Act Award, Nordic:Dox Award, a new section for upcoming talents called Next:Wave, docs for kids, docs about artists, docs on the actual populism, Danish docs, festival hits and so on so forth.

Let me pick some of the films that I have heard about in beforehand or that we at filmkommentaren.dk have already written about or reviewed. Or intend to…

The Danish ones in the main competition: The opening film ”Last Men in Aleppo” by Feras Fayyad, with Steen Johannessen as co-director, it won at the Sundance festival. We will review this strong film that not only brought tears to my eyes but also made me sad and angry about what happens and has happened in Syria. Talented Jeppe Rønde’s ”The John Dalli Mystery” starring the

journalists Mads Brügger and Mikael Bertelsen. The film is described like this: ”Brügger and Bertelsen uncover the plans for the murder of a former EU commissioner in a thrilling and funny detective film, where one twist follows another…” And Phie Ambo’s ”… when you look away”: ” Where are the limits of consciousness and are we connected in ways we never knew? … these big questions in a filmic experiment with surprising answers.”

Also I want to see Margreth Olin’s film from a kindergarten, ”Childhood”, Ulrich Seidl’s ”Safari”, Askold Kurov’s film on ”The State vs Oleg Sentsov”, Michal Marczak’s ”All these Sleepless Nights”. And many more if time allows.

AND YOU should see the following films that we have already praised on filmkommentaren, click and you will be taken to our texts:

Rahul Jain: ”Machines”, Torstein Grude and Niels Pagh Andersen’s ”Mogadishu Soldier”, Sergei Loznitsa’s ”Austerlitz”, Nikolaus Geyrhalter’s ”Homo Sapiens” that will be played with a musical  accompagnement, Jërome le Maire’s ”Burning Out” (PHOTO), that will have a screening at Rigshospitalet, our biggest hospital in Denmark (!), Kirsten Johnson’s ”Cameraperson”, ”I am not your Negro” by Raoul Peck…

In a couple of days you will be invited to read my review of the film by Mona Willi and Michael Glawogger, ”Untitled”, also that is of course at CPH:DOX. Glawogger died in 2014, his editor made ”his” film from the material he had shot.

https://cphdox.dk/en/programme/programme-2017/ 

CPH:DOX 2017 /Industry

”Industry”, that is what CPH:DOX, and all the other big festivals call – quoted from the site – ”the various activities offer professional development, networking, and business opportunities to filmmakers and industry professionals at all levels of experience”.

So when the audience happily goes to watch films, the producers and directors and people like me, who is curious to know what is happening at the market, or which themes the filmmakers pick or what the funders are looking for or what kind of training is offered… we miss some films but are spoilt in other ways. CPH:DOX 2017, indeed, has done a lot to give us choices and it has to be said that most of these professional activities take place during day time, where screenings of course fill the evenings.

CPH:Conference is a series of day-long thematic sessions that the festival has set up in collaboration with the training programme Discovery Campus with the support of the daily Danish newspaper Information. ”Science and Film”, ”Art, Technology & Change” and ”Serialized” are some of the points, the latter including a visit by the Oscar winner Ezra Edelmann to talk on his film on O.J.

The CPH:Forum is more than similar events at other big festivals focused on bringing in ”auteurs”, so you will find names like Hubert Sauper, Kirsten Johnson, Roberto Minervini, Sally Potter, Sophie Fiennes AND our local hero, amazing Jørgen Leth on the list of people to pitch. To whom? Quote from the site: ”This year we welcome, amongst many others, highly esteemed broadcasters such as ARTE, ZDF, NDR, BBC, DR, film funds from all over Europe, as well as Ford Foundation, Tribeca Film Institute, Fondation Cartier, Tate Modern and Sundance Institute.”

And there is a CPH:Lab and a CPH: Academy for young filmmakers and their projects to be developed, and a market for people like me, who want to see films in the videotheque.

You name it – It’s all there!

https://cphdox.dk/en/cphindustry/?i=1

A Festival Was Born

… with the Docs & Talks at Cinemateket in Copenhagen. Filmkommentaren has been happy to be a so-called media supporter of a festival with a different profile than the ones we usually know and write about: Films were shown and followed by hour-long thematic talks and discussions about terrorism, Denmark’s wars, international aid programs, migration and apologies for past sins with researchers from DIIS (Danish Institute for International Studies), filmmakers and even military personnel (!) as participants.

The DIIS and Cinemateket were organisers, Danish Film Institute supported, Sara Thelle and Mira Bach Hansen selected, promoted and hosted together with Rasmus Brendstrup from Cinemateket,

There was an average of 95 in the cinema for the 11 screenings, 1055 in total, impressive when you take into consideration that many of the screenings took place weekdays in the afternoon. “Je Suis le Peuple” by Anna Roussillon was one of the best films at the festival, 117 came to watch and listen to researcher Rasmus Boserup talk about Egypt. Therefore a still from that film.

Small is Beautiful, next year with eventual evening screenings… the numbers will double.

Doc Festivals in March

On the last day of the short February month, let’s take a look at the many festivals coming up in March. And let me apologise in advance for those I have forgotten to mention…

One has already started, the Croatian Zagrebdox, that goes on until April 3rd, set up years ago by producer and director Nenad Puhovski, who has a safe hand when it comes to selection. He simply picks what he thinks is the best and ends up with having praised works in his competitive programs like Piotr Stasik’s ”21 x New York” (photo), Kirsten Johnson’s ”Cameraperson”, Salome Jashi’s ”The Dazzling Light of Sunset”, Maite Alberdi’s ”The Grown-Ups” and Pawel Lozinski’s chamberplay ”You Have No Idea of How Much I love You”. All in International Competition, whereas the

Regional presents films like ”Depth Two” by Ognjen Glavonić, Mihajlo Jevtić’s ”Four Passports” and ”The Beast is still Alive” by Bulgarian Mina Mileva, Vesela Kazakova, all three reviewed on this site. I can’t mention all but I like that Puhovski has an Official Program with audience-friendly sections like ”Biography Dox”, ”Happy Dox”, ”Musical Globe”, ”Controversial Dox”, ”Masters”, who this year are Ulrich Seidl, Audrius Stonys, Jon Bang Carlsen, Vitaly Manski et al…. And a Nikolaus Geyrhalter retro as well as one with films from Puhovski’s Factum to celebrate 20 years of production. It’s all very well thought and presented, as you can see at the link below. And there is an industry section ZagrebdoxPro with training, project development and pitching.

In Greece there is the annual Thessaloniki Documentary Festival that starts March 2nd and goes on until the 13th, also with pitching etc., organised by EDN, and with a ”carte blanche” selection made by the man who started the festival and has now resigned, Dimitri Eipides. A true film lover!

In Prague the One World International Human Rights Film Festival takes off March 6 and goes on until the 15th with the impressive East Doc Platform running parallel with lectures, training, project development, pitching, meetings, presentations… I will be there for some days.

And in Paris, at the Centre Pompidou, there is the classic Cinéma du Réel from March 24 to April 2, always with several premieres from countries in Latin America and Africa.

CPH:DOX starts March 16 and runs until March 26 – the program is launched and includes a new venue, an interesting industry program, training, and many competitive sections. We will, as based in Denmark, cover the festival with reviews and reports.

And I am looking forward to come back to Kiev to DocuDays, that starts March 24 and runs until March 31. There is full house for many screenings and enthusiasm and fine discussions. And new Ukrainian films dealing with actuality, hopefully ”with a creative treatment” as said John Grierson way back, when he defined the genre.

Which means that I can not attend the American Documentary Film Festival in Palm Springs this year. It runs March 31 until April 5. Festival director Teddy Groyua has published his fine international programme that again includes films selected by Dokufest colleagues in Kosovo.

Below you find links to the festivals mentioned.

http://zagrebdox.net/en/2017/home

http://tdf.filmfestival.gr

https://www.oneworld.cz/2017/festival/

https://www.dokweb.net/articles/detail/227/accreditations-for-east-doc-platform-2017-are-now-open

http://www.cinemadureel.org/en

https://cphdox.dk/en/

http://docudays.org.ua/eng/

http://www.americandocumentaryfilmfestival.com/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Docs & Talks /12

Fuck… lød det fra ydersædet på min række. Arrangør og filmudvælger Sara Thelle var højlydt utilfreds med at mikrofonerne i Cinematekets Asta Biograf gav forstyrrende hvislende bilyde – og fik den næsten fyldte sals tilskuere til at klukke af medfølelse. Det var ikke første gang, vi havde været vidne til svigtende teknik. Det var det heller ikke for Cinematekets Rasmus Brendstrup, som tålmodigt flere gange gik ned til scenen, skiftede mikrofonerne ud, tilkaldte en tekniker. Det hjalp ikke. Til sidst spurgte Brendstrup publikum om ikke vi kunne klare arrangementet uden mikrofoner. Joooo!

Med denne menneskelige start var forsamlingen rystet sammen og ”Nye Syriske Kortfilm” kom i gang og skuffede ikke de fremmødte. Helle Malmvig fra DIIS kædede filmene sammen på fornemste vis. Fra Paris kom Dani Abo Louh for at vise og kommentere sin ”A Spring Tale”, som han har lavet sammen med Mohamad Omran, et fint stykke animationskunst skabt i 2011, da der stadig var håb for den syriske revolution. ”We were optimistic at that time”. En ny form for kunstnerisk udtryk fulgte gennem ”det anonyme filmkollektiv Abou Nadarra, (som) hver fredag siden begyndelsen af oprøret i 2011 (har) lagt en lille film ud på internettet.” De to korte film, der blev vist, var ”After the Image” og ”The Unknown Soldier”.

Gribende var det at møde herboende syrisk-kurdiske digter Jan

Pêt Khorto, som læste sit digt på arabisk fulgt af en dansk oversættelse, læst af Helle Malmvig. Titel: ”Var jeg ikke bare skabt som pige”.

Før den sidste film, ”Love During the Siege” (FOTO) talte Malmvig om ”entrapment” som overskrift for den periode, vi befinder os i nu, næsten 6 år efter marts 2011. Instruktøren Mattar Ismaeds film er en smuk registrering af, hvordan en familie klarer sig i hverdagen i et kvarter i det sydlige Damaskus. De laver mad under kummerlige forhold, går langt for at hente vand, står i kø for at få lidt suppe, overlever – siger filmen – på den gensidige ”love during the siege”. Hvad mange ikke gør, står der i en afsluttende tekst på lærredet, tusinder dør af sult.

Tidligere samme fredag havde jeg været til et symposium om film og forskning, et mere internt arrangement, hvor publikum, så vidt jeg kunne se, først og fremmest var fra den forskende side, og der var mange studerende. Hvor var filmens folk – jo, de var i panelet og de var gode (DFI’s Ane Mandrup, producent Signe Byrge Sørensen, instruktør Camilla Nielsson og Sine Plambech, som arbejder på DIIS, er antropolog og filminstruktør) – men flovt at der ikke var filmfolk i salen.

Første taler var Kristian Møller Moltke Martiny, som pegede på filmens kommunikative evne, når vanskeligt forskningsmateriale skal formidles. Han havde været med til udviklingen af Jakob Nossell og Christian Sønderby Jepsens film ”Naturens Uorden” og fortalte, hvordan filmen havde nået et kæmpepublikum, som havde fået øjnene op for, hvad spastisk lammelse er for noget.

Martiny er også tilknyttet en ny film af Phie Ambo, som hun præsenterer på det kommende CPH:DOX. Titlen er ”Når du kigger væk”, et klip blev vist, så lovende ud, emnet er ”hvad er bevidsthed”. Sådan!

Martiny pegede på det fine samarbejde mellem filmfolk og forskere, som han havde oplevet og henviste til – det samme gjorde Ane Mandrup fra DFI – et seminar om emnet som har været afholdt, link nedenfor, et samarbejde mellem Open Media Lab og DFI.

Signe Byrge Sørensen, publikum taget i betragtning, var meget pædagogisk i sin forklaring af, hvordan forskning og film kan mødes. Hun brugte sin erfaring fra de to verdens-successer, hun har stået bag, ”The Act of Killing” og ”The Look of Silence”, og samarbejdet med filmens instruktør Joshua Oppenheimer. ”Det kræver tid, det handler om at finde de store værdier. Komme tættere og dybere, fange de autentiske øjeblikke, hvor tingene sker…” Hun talte om at skabe det åbne rum, hvor der er plads til det anarkistiske og om at nedbryde de klassiske hierarkier – sagde hun og fik dermed også sagt at forskere er velkomne, men at de må forstå, at film af den slags, hun producerer, tager lang tid og koster mange penge og at der skal findes finansiører.

Fra Danmarks mest iøjnefaldende kompetente producent til instruktøren bag ”Democrats”, Camilla Nielsson, hvilket får mig til at bruge min gamle mentor Niels Jensens ord: hun er en pryd for genren, Nielsson. Hendes mesterlige film om forfatningsarbejdet i Zimbabwe har været på 80 filmfestivaler, kan nu ses via Netflix – og er forbudt af Mugabe og hans folk. Forbudt via en pornografi-paragraf! MEN advokater i landet er i gang med at rejse en sag, pro bono, de vil bruge den til at rejse debat om ytringsfrihed. ”Nielsson Against Mugabe”! Camilla Nielsson, uddannet antropolog, fortalte underholdende om, hvordan hun havde filmet i Zimbabwe, hvordan hun var blevet accepteret af de to hovedpersoner – den ene havde karakteriseret hende som hvid udenpå, sort indeni. ”Jeg filmer det der sker”, sagde hun, som havde taget lyden på optagelserne. ”Det var godt for så var jeg ikke én af dem, der står i et hjørne med sin notesblok”. Ved en anden lejlighed har Nielsson fortalt at det skabte respekt at en hvid kvinde rendte rundt med en boomstang blandt alle disse sorte mænd og kvinder ved forhandlingsbordet. Der blev vist klip.

Som der blev, da antropolog og filminstruktør Sine Plambech fortalte fint om sit arbejde som migrationsforsker, der førte til de roste film ”Fra Thailand til Thy” og ”Fra Thy til Thailand”, som hun lavede sammen med Janus Metz. De to er nu ved at færdiggøre en stor produktion med samme tema, ”10 år efter”, titel ”Mellem to verdener”.

Der var folk i salen, som følte sig lidt forpustede, efter Signe Byrge og Camilla Nielssons indlæg. ”Det lyder tungt og bureaukratisk at komme til at lave film”, så Plambech kom med beroligende kommentarer, da hun fortalte om ”Becky’s Journey”, en film hun havde lavet for 250.000 kr. om en kvinde fra det sydlige Nigeria som forsøger at komme ud af landet – til Europa. Filmen nåede en række festivaler.

Og Plambech fortsatte med at fortælle forsamlingen af forskere at de ”ikke skal sælge deres arbejde billigt. Tænk på hvad du selv kan stå inde for”.

To af de mange arrangementer i ”Docs & Talks”. Jeg var der så igen i går søndag til Anna Roussillon’s ”Je suis le peuple”, som jeg havde læst så meget godt om. Jeg blev ikke skuffet, den lever i sin kronologiske karakter-drevne fortælling fra Ægypten som et stykke historie om Mubaraks fald til Morsi’s korte periode som leder af landet før al-Sisi og militæret tog over. Alt det vidste vi godt, men Roussillon sætter historien i en menneskelig ramme ved at opsøge sine karakterer ude på landet, mennesker som hun kender, mennesker som kender hende og taler og diskuterer med hende, sådan kommer du tæt på, sådan skaber du en troværdighed OG værdighed omkring dine medvirkende. Det er morsomt, gribende og folkeligt i bedste forstand. Efter filmen talte Rasmus Boserup, der er ekspert i arabisk politik, jeg har lyttet til ham mange gange på TV, og det gjorde han dejligt ligetil på dansk med masser af engelske ord  – og med fin reference til hvad filmen kan og hvad han kan som forsker, der lige har udgivet bogen ”Efter foråret”. Filmen kan det menneskelige, i min bog prøver jeg at analysere det politiske.

Lige præcist hvad festivalen Docs & Talks har præsteret i Cinemateket – at give filmiske oplevelser og dokumentationer, som er fulgt op af forskeres kommentarer til de rejste temaer. Jeg kommer igen næste år!

https://ff.hrw.org/sites/default/files/films/press_kits/

www.dfi.dk/Branche_og_stoette/Creative-Europe-Desk/

https://jesuislepeuple.com/ 

Sergey Loznitsa: Austerlitz/ 3

Loznitsa was in Belgrade at the beginning of this month, did a masterclass – I was there to pick up some of his interesting bon mots on his way of making films – my text turned out to be – also – a kind of review of this great work:

He was adressing the audience in the Sava Center and said that this amount of people at one screening is the same as we have had in one month in theatres in Germany! Where the film was released mid December. The reviews have been great in Germany but it seems to be difficult to attract the audience for a film like ”Austerlitz” directed by Ukrainian Sergei Loznitsa. I can only say that the Belgrade audience deserves a big Bravo to come and appreciate a film like this that is challenging. Well I know that many found it long and boring, but also that many left the cinema having experienced a piece of cinematic art.

There was a full house for the Q&A in the VIP room afterwards for a one hour session, where the director explained how he came to have an interest in holocaust tourism and how he made it into a film. Equally interesting was a friday morning where he was with young and younger filmmakers for a couple of hours showing examples from previous films.

As one of the trio of selectors (Svetlana and Zoran Popovic being the other two) I have been happy to present ”Austerlitz” at the Magnificent7 festival. With me it is a film that almost works physically. Loznitsa´s construction of the sound score is a superb

alliance to the black & white images, where there is no camera movement and where every frame is precise and full of meaning in its composition. Back to the sound… it goes on my nerves when I am confronted with the sound of steps of all the tourists, who are visiting the camps – after visiting several, Loznitsa decided to concentrate on Dachau and Sachsenhausen – in their almost naked summer dress with their smart phones clicking all the time, their audioguides linked to the ear, and their selfie-photo-taking.

There IS so much disrespect in the behaviour of the tourists, Loznitsa is not pointing at that, it is my interpretation based on his aesthetic somewhat pure approach. But you are not only shaking your head when watching: Suddenly he introduces a sequence of faces, who look concentrated at, well what it is, we don’t see it, but we read the faces and the emotions, and after some faces Loznitsa lets church bells ring… and I remember what he said at the workshop: you have to let the unexpected in because that’s what we as viewers actually expect. In other words it was exactly what I needed from the director, this gentle comment to the faces and their feelings.

40 shooting days, I never hide the camera, precise information on use of lenses, I don’t like people looking into the camera, lot of discussion on the quick cutting at the end of the film contrary to the long shots otherwise used. Loznitsa was generous in his explanations, a mild man, precise as the mathematician he is by education, an education he took before he entered the Moscow film school VGIK and made his first fine work, “Together we are going to build a house” (28 mins.) from 1995. I remember I had seen it before, maybe also awarded it at a festival, anyway it was fine to hear him talk about the film sequence by sequence, and if anyone thinks that Loznitsa is dry and clinical in some of his films, they might be right but here there is a lot of humour that he conveys in the way that he looks at people.

And constructs the film. Because a film is a construction, it is being built, as Loznitsa – and colleague Allan Berg – says again and again. This film was made on 35mm, 20 reels, 2 months of editing, no narration, just an idea, he said, structured like a reportage, “one day in the life of…” these people building the house, and to tell the audience that it was shot over some time, he let a sequence with a dog on the building site be repeated three times!

Cinema for me lies only in the pictures with the use of sound in a creative way.

How to… for every film I make there is a set of rules of “yes” and “no”. And after an editing Loznitsa produces a graph, where he can see how a film flow is with rhythm, where there is most energy – amazing, must be his mathematic background!

At the workshop Loznitsa also showed a clip from the short film he made in Riga from the Jewish cemetery and from “Landscapes” (2003, 60 mins.), part of “Riga Force Majeure”.

Sergei Loznitsa is a director who operates with fiction, documentaries and archive films. As for the latter, I can only recommend those of our readers, who are historically interested to watch “Blockade” (2005) on the siege of Leningrad, “Maidan” (2014) and “The Event” (2015). Loznitsa told me in Belgrade that he now prepares an archive film based on material from Stalin’s processes. He has the footage, it’s amazing he said, he looks forward to the editing process, were he normally includes Lithuanian Danielius Kokanauskis.

Several of Loznitsa’s film are available on DocAlliance, link below.

http://loznitsa.com/

http://dafilms.fr/search/?q=sergei+loznitsa 

www.dfi.cinemateket

 

 

 

Sergey Loznitsa: Austerlitz/ 2

This is a text written by festival directors Svetlana and Zoran Popovic about Loznitsa’s film that was recently screened at the Magnificent7 festival in Belgrade and will be shown at Cinemateket Sunday February 26:

Premiered at the Venice Film Festival, “AUSTERLITZ” is another distinct documentary made by Sergei Loznitsa, who is currently one of the most significant European authors. Made in the form of classical black-and-white film, without many words, without any comment or explanation, with distinctive style in which his previous documentaries were made, this film is a complex and surprising anthropological study of collective behavior and consciousness. With the precise distance, which he determines and then never passes, Loznitsa reveals a phenomenon that intrigues us and provokes, equally as much it confuses us. This is a film in which the author, with the means of exquisite photography, camera, editing and directing, creates an exciting essay filled with tension, which turns the viewer into the silent interested witness and questioning participant.

There are places in Europe that keep the painful memories of the past – factories where people were turned into ashes. These places are now memorial complexes open to visitors and receive thousands of tourists every year. The name of the film is taken from the novel of one of the most important contemporary writers from the end of XX and the beginning of the XXI century, W.G. Sebald, which is dedicated to the memory of the Holocaust.

Loznitsa wrote: “What am I doing here? What are all these people doing here, moving in groups from one object to another? The reason that brings thousands of people to spend their summer weekends in former concentration camps is one of the mysteries of these memorial complexes.” The film is an attempt to deliberate these mysteries.

Germany, 2016, 94 mins.

http://www.loznitsa.eu/

Docs & Talks /11

ANNA ROUSSILLON: I AM THE PEOPLE

Hvordan ser revolutionen i 2011 og dens efterveer ud set fra en landsby langt fra Tahrir-pladsen? I palmelundene i Luxor-dalen diskuteres der – i et samfund præget af årtiers diktatur – også politik, ligesom der småskændes og filosoferes på højt plan. ‘I Am the People’ er en smuk og klog film, der med overblik og humor stiller spørgsmål til demokratiets forudsætninger og vilkår.

DIIS’ Rasmus Alenius Boserup diskuterer, med afsæt i dokumentarfilmen ‘I Am the People’ og sin egen bog ‘Efter foråret’, de spændninger, muligheder og blokeringer, der præger egyptisk og mellemøstlig politik i dag.

Je suis le peuple, Frankrig, Egypten, 2014. DCP, 111 min. Engelske undertekster. Film og debat i Cinemateket, København søndag 26.02.17, Kl. 14:00

http://www.dfi.dk/Filmhuset/Cinemateket/Billetter-og-program/Serie.aspx?id=13247 

Docs & Talks /10

McEVVOY/FAROUKY: TELL SPRING NOT TO COME THIS SPRING

The Docs & Talks festival in Copenhagen screens this excellent film saturday night at 17.45, followed by a debate, at the Film House, Cinemateket. Two years ago I made this review of the film:

I have been there before. Danish director Janus Metz went to the Helmand Province in Afghanistan to make ”Armadillo” about ”our” soldiers on mission. After more than a decade in the country, the NATO troops have withdrawn leaving the job to fight the enemy, the Taliban, to ANA, the Afghan National Army.

The mood of the Afghan soldiers is quite different than the one of the Danish soldiers, who (until they end up in a real battle) saw the trip, one of them puts it like that, as like going to play a real football match after long training and preparation. Quite different, a true understatement, because what you get in the impressive film by Saeed Taji Farouky and Michael McEvoy, shot over a period of one year, is an insight to a situation that seems to be without any hope and perspective: an army with soldiers, who have no respect for the politicians or for what the NATO troops achieved, an atmosphere of depression, they have not been paid for months, they see the local population as stuck between taliban and the government’s army. No actual way out.

The filmmakers have wisely chosen to have a focus on two – the

captain Jalaluddin and private Sunnatullah. Their remarks are mostly put off-screen, their reflections are mingled with fine observational coverage of the soldiers in the camp, playing cards, playing football, before they are called to action. And action you get in the film! It is amazing how close the filmmakers go – as said by the young soldier: we were told that the Sangin battle would last 24 hours, it ended up being 45 days… It seems like the filmmakers were there for the whole time.

It’s a total inferno, soldiers are heavily injured, you see that, you see the fear in the eyes of soldiers, you see and hear the desperate call for help given by the captain – and you go home with them to the camp to understand that several had died. For what, you think, because the film makes you think so. The two protagonists have hopes for a good life, for peace, but on what fundament can they build their hope?

As a film ”Tell Spring…” is excellently crafted. The camerawork (mainly done by Farouky) is amazing, there is a narrative flow in the story, a respect for the protagonists, an ability to show the conflicts in the army and to the society, carried gently by fine music composed for the film. No wonder it won the Panorama Audience Award at the Berlinale as well as the Amnesty International Film Award.

UK, 2015, 83 mins.