It appears to me that film today has consigned itself
to contemplating the manifest destiny of urban life. The extremes of admiration
and anxiety that previously characterised film�s relationship with the city have
given way to a state of uneasy resignation. In many respects, this is consistent
with how cities are viewed today in general. Art and theory have both come to
accept the inevitability that typifies today�s urban life, and have also
committed themselves to describing such a predicament without actively looking
for a way out. Following mayor Giuliani�s �success� in
Curiously, film�s resignation does not seem to be
dulling its interest in the city. If anything, there seems to be more interest
in the city itself as subject matter as opposed to its more conventional role as
a backdrop. While
Think
Towards the end of Terra Incognita, the protagonist Soraya
watches a new building rise from the rubble of the old and a man defiantly
comments, "It's the seventh time
This concession to the status quo confines the camera
to a limited space in which it can manoeuvre. Salhab and many other contemporary
Middle Eastern filmmakers subject the faces and bodies of their characters to
very close scrutiny, as if imploring them to pronounce only to be stared back
at, impassively. This close proximity seems to rule out any possibility of
seeing beyond the here and now, the surface that appears so close by so as to
preclude a bigger picture from emerging.
Yet, it is in �images with depth and wider horizons�
that we need to look for the future, as the Lebanese writer Bilal Khbeiz asks us
to do in his essay Images of Little
Means. In discussing the works of Abbas Kiarostami, Mohsen Makhmalbaf and
Elia Suleiman (1), Khbeiz notes:
�These filmmakers are remarkable for their images, which seem to breathe as deeply as trees do. Images with the precision of faces, which even when simply scanning the skies, fields and stretches of wilderness, seem to humbly complain and implore the heavens. When journalists dutifully interview Palestinians who have just witnessed the razing of their home by the Israeli war-machine, they ask them what they plan to do next. The answers are often: �We have God.� For God is all that is left once a man has been denuded and exposed. The homeless Palestinians look at the sky and seem to remember its breathtaking beauty, as if it had been hidden for years by their own built roofs. The sky is all that can be spoken of with familiarity and safety.� (2)
It is to that sky that the camera turns when the
present appears too oppressive. But this is not a resigned gesture, nor an
escapist one. Instead, it is those filmmakers way of pointing to the future
without portraying it. Such portrayal would inevitably become a caricature.
Rather, they point to the landscape and see in it a possibility, and show
through it an insistence on living that is distinct from resignation. Their
modernity is in incomplete one, and even one that is in danger of reversing
itself at any moment, yet it is one that is possible to
resume.
Compare that wandering movement of the camera away
from the city with how a similar excursion plays out in Trainspotting. When the group of friends
at the centre of the film visits
The Scottish context is, of course, different from
that of the
It is worth commenting on the differences between
Irvine Welsh�s novel and the film itself. As Mazierska and Rascaroli point out,
the film neglects the issue of class which features more prominently in the
novel. Similarly, Welsh is not entirely antagonistic to the council estate,
although it is a limiting environment to grow up in it still gives the residents
a sense of belonging. These subtleties around the issues of class and belonging
are done away with in the film. Firstly, the estate itself is not identified and
does not feature prominently, and secondly the �touch of surrealism� in interior
scenes does not allow for direct class associations in the manner of British
social realist films. The film consciously creates a sense of an oppressive
environment without delving into particularities. It establishes an a priori dead-end situation, so to
speak.
Trainspotting is not unique in this regard, it has become common in film today to
dwell on situations and dispense with causalities. Inquisitiveness and
consideration in this context would invite solutions and remedies, and it seems
that these are possibilities that film today would prefer to discourage. This
tendency is inherent to a certain extent, for film is not an ideal discursive
medium. When it attempts to be explicitly political it runs the risk of becoming
didactic, as the recent work of Godard illustrates, or cynical and
conspiratorial. (Syriana, The
Corporation, Fahrenheit 9/11). Yet, as last year�s Das Leben der Anderen (The Lives of Others) reminds us, it is
possible for film to be thoughtful and inspiring, even in the bleakest of
situations. This is not to say that Das
Leben der Anderen is artistically superior to Trainspotting on the grounds that it has
a more positive attitude, it stands out because it does not allow the situation
to dictate the narrative. In that sense, it refuses to cater to the idea of
destiny.
In contrast, other contemporary German films appear
to be captivated by that notion of destiny and the futility of attempting to
change circumstances. When discussing films about/in
�Depicting the state of things� is indeed a common
characteristic, yet that description is in itself problematic. Film can
selectively focus our attention on an unrepresentative sample of life in the
city, but this can never be a complete depiction. What�s more important to
observe here is that filmmakers are portraying �those who are victims of the
situation�. In other words, they are creating characters that lack freedom. Any
claim that such characters correspond to real citizens or that their
predicaments are authentic will be mediated by the filmmakers� biases and ideas.
It seems that this mediation is tending more often than not towards denying
characters a sense of agency.
In talking about agency, we need to be very precise. We can assume that John McClane in Die Hard is endowed with agency, yet the opposite is exactly true. McClane has no choice, he has to shoot himself out of situations and wisecrack his way through 90 minutes of film at the end of which he meets his wife again. Agency rarely manifests itself in super-heroism. I am thinking of another type of agency, such as that masterfully depicted by Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar. Almodovar talks of giving his characters a sense of freedom and moral independence, something which he considers essential in all his films. This doesn�t mean that things will turn out their way, they often don�t. As Almodovar puts it �I give my characters a problem, but at the same time I give them energy, an energy to survive and fight that is based in freedom.� (6)
The outcome is uncertain and, to a
certain extent, inconsequential. What matters is the struggle itself, and a
sense of loyalty to it. In
the words of Agrado, the transsexual character in Todo sobre mi madre
(All About My Mother, 1999) �The more you become like what you have dreamed for
yourself, the more authentic you are�. Authenticity is not derived from the past
but aimed at the future. Not of where you come from but what you can become.
This concept of authenticity is transferred to how Almodovar imagines and films
the city with a great deal of artifice and manipulation. This is not a style of
realism that relies on truthfulness to the original but on the plausibility of
entirely constructed situations. In Volver, even raising the dead, reversing
the ultimate destiny, becomes plausible.
Defining the task of neorealism, Cesare Zavattini
wrote in the 50s: "The moral, like the artistic, problem lies in being able to
observe reality, not to extract fictions from it." Abbas Kiarostami proposes a
different idea. �What is cinema? It�s an image that�s not limited to what you
see. It has many different layers, and sometimes those layers dissolve the
images that you see, and you just think about the layers.� (7) The role of children in Italian neorealism was
indicative of its sentiments and aspirations; they witnessed the problems of the
day but also represented the solution. At the hands of the Italian masters,
realism was grounded in the present but open to the future. Today, realism is
grounded. It is trapped by the paucity of visions. To observe reality without an
eye to the future is an opportunistic pretext for filmmaking, it ends up
portraying the city as a destiny.
That�s why Kiarostami�s definition is more relevant
today. It�s obvious to me that much of film�s transfixion with the banality of
existence and its limitations is self-induced. Yet, the continuing success of
Iranian cinema despite its modesty highlights the possibility of making
meaningful films that have universal appeal without appealing to rigid ideas of
culture and identity that mask a reverence of destiny. A similar thing could be
said of Almodovar�s films that transcend the barriers of language and culture,
primarily because of their insistence on freedom. Rather than demanding that
film provide solutions, it is more appropriate to ask that it challenges our
expectations and not reinforce our preconceptions and ideas. This is not an
unreasonable demand, especially if we were to treat film as art.
The challenge for film today, it seems to me, is to
represent its context without appealing to pre-constructed notions of identity,
locality or tradition, but rather to confront experience with imagination. It
has to engage with situations and create a representation that is layered and
not immediate. This it would have to do without bearing the burden of realism,
but rather of plausibility, relevance and, above all, meaning. Kiarostami�s
definition of cinema as �an image that�s not limited to what you see� is a
remarkable recipe. As long as cinema doesn�t limit itself to reality as it
appears, it will be able to create complex and engaging representations of the
city.
1 Abbas Kiarostami and Mohsen
Makhmalbaf are both Iranian directors that have become well known in the west in
recent years. Elia Suleiman is a slightly less-known Palestinian director, best
known for his film Divine Intervention. (2002) which won the Jury Prize at the
2 Images with Little Means by Bilal Khbeiz available at http://www.sescsp.org.br
3 Ewa Mazierska and Laura
Rascaroli. From
4 Mazierska and Rascaroli, Page
1995 Mazierska and Rascaroli, Page
135-6. Some of the films discussed are Life is a Building Site(1997), Run, Lola Run(1998), Plus-Minus Null(1998), Night Shapes(1998), and Sara America(1998).
6 Pedro Almodovar talks to BBC
Newsnight, 3 September 2007
7 From a talk at the New York Museum of Modern Art.