You can not escape your heart or a crocodile! |
It’s not often that the Robert Burns Centre Film Theatre
Film Club viewers are so strongly divided over a film, but that’s what happened
following the screening of the Portuguese film Tabu (2012). Our host for
the evening was Pat Pickering who had the rather dubious task of introducing
the unfamiliar work of 40-year-old Miguel Gomes. She started by telling her curious
audience that this was Gomes third feature film, his best known was probably This Beloved Month of August (2008), which
won the Portuguese Golden Globe and was released via London in January 2010 apparently
disappearing into obscurity in the rest of the UK.
Using the same cinematographer his latest film won a prize
for Artistic Innovation at the Berlin Film Festival with Pat describing it as a
movie about love, passion, friendship and betrayal. Shoot in both 35mm and 16
mm black and white film stock its divided into a prologue and two segments, in the
first segment, ‘Lost Paradise’ we
encounter a chilly depressing modern day Lisbon where we find a lonely middle
aged spinster Pilar who is concerned about her elderly neighbour Aurora in the
early stages of dementia and is being looked after by her African maid Santa.
When Aurora is hospitalised she asks Pilar to fetch Gian Luca Ventura an
elderly resident at an old peoples home. For the second part of the film, ‘Paradise’ we return in time to a 1960’s
unnamed Portuguese African colony (actually filmed in Mozambique) where Gian
Luca narrates a tragic story of Aurora’s complete disregard for the sanctity of
marriage that has been kept hidden for 50 years.
The older Aurora (Laura Soveral) |
Returning after the break the audience, as I have previously
intimated was divided over the merits of Gomes’s film with, I believe, the
majority disliking the film for various reasons. As normal some of the reasons
for admiring the film are the same as these for disliking it! The 4:3 aspect, the fact that other than the
voice over the second segment was dialogue free and that the whole thing was
shot in black and white, which in the first segment was sharp and clear, but
the second part, shot in 16mm, was dull, flat and grainy.
The younger Aurora. (Ana Moreira) |
The main problems with this film was that it was tedious and
by the end of the film it felt like you had been wading through a thick
quagmire for two hours. The prologue seemed only to be included to give the
film a tag line ‘You cannot escape your heart’ It was totally humourless and
impossible to empathise with any of the characters; you really did not care
what happened to any of them. Pat had said that it was the director’s intention
to make an interesting film, but I’m afraid this melodrama failed. It did prove
however that it was possible to make a art house film that was too art house.
For another example see The
Turin Horse (2011) A far better non dialogue film is Le
Quattro Volte (2010) which is also spit into segments but works perfectly
and is a joy to watch.
Aurora playing away from home with Gian Luca |
Incidentally there were a couple of points of interest
raised during the discussion. Aurora is supposed to have been a technical
adviser on an imaginary Hollywood movie called It Will Never Snow again Over
Kilimanjaro, could Gomes have been referring to the 1952 film starring Gregory
Peck and Ava Gardner and based on a short story by Ernest Hemingway called The Snows of Kilimanjaro? Another cinematic
reference is German film director FW Murnau's 1931 film of the same name, which according to
Gomes, he used to give it a connection with silent film. Murnau’s
film is also split into two chapters, the first called "Paradise and the
second chapter, "Paradise Lost.
Although it may not always be possible to like the film
on offer it still makes for a great evening when a lively disscussion follows.
No comments:
Post a Comment