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Film-Philosophy International
Salon-Journal (ISSN 1466-4615) Vol. 9 No. 45, November 2005 |
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Martha P. Nochimson Five International Cinematic Perspectives on the
'Nature' of Love and Childhood: New York Film Festival 2005 Report (Part Two) As a rule, Hollywood naturalizes human behavior. For
this it has been taken to task for the past thirty years in scholarly studies
of gender, race, and class, the fallout from which has reached mass cultural
public discourse. Although usually in much watered down form, mass media
journalists now question the naturalization of sexism and racism in the
movies and are almost ready to question the assumption that anything is
natural to human beings, that everything we are, even feelings attributed to
motherhood, are all mediated and shaped by social systems. But now 'high
culture' may be taking a new direction. What follows is a group of films
presented at the New York Film Festival 2005 which, uninterested in Hollywood
commercialism or its possible connections to patriarchy and Capitalism, in
subtle or not so subtle ways, seem to be espousing essentialist views of human
nature. These views are complex to be sure, and are conveyed with the
artistry of the auteur (not the zero degree ideal of the old Hollywood studio
system and many a current, post-studio, blockbuster directorial type), but
they are essentialist all the same. Whether this trend will raise hackles, or
promote a feeling of wellbeing that to dig deeply enough is to discover that
there is something at the core of humanity not created by culture, will very
much depend on assumptions brought by the spectator to the table. _L'Enfant_ (Dir. Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, Belgium)
is not about a child. Or is it? The ambiguous title may refer to the newborn
baby of a very young unwed couple, Bruno (Jeremie Renier) and Sonia (Deborah
Francois), or it may refer to Bruno himself, who is the narrative focus of
the film. The pressbook tells us that the film was inspired by an incident
during the shooting of the previous Dardenne collaboration, _The Son_. 'We
were in Seraing, Belgium on Rue du Molinay. In the morning, afternoon, and
evening, we saw a girl pushing a pram along, with a newborn baby asleep
inside it. She didn't seem to be going anywhere in particular -- just around
and around with the pram. We have often thought back to the girl, her pram,
the sleeping child, and the missing character: the child's father. This
absent figure would become our story . . . a love story that is also the
story of a father.' Missing the father is in _L'Enfant_, but not in the
generally understood sense of the term. _L'Enfant_ is a film that is wide open in every respect.
Most of it unfolds on the street, giving play to a humanity mostly
unprotected by the well furnished rooms of bourgeois life and unconstricted
by its prudent, conformist values. Similarly, _L'Enfant_ is neither furnished
nor bound up by the conventions of genre. In a way that both disquiets and
invigorates the audience, the film proceeds unpredictably. When the film
begins, Sonia is searching for Bruno. Clearly living on the edge, Sonia
doggedly traverses poverty-scarred streets, provoking fears that what we see
is familiar narrative code: she and the baby are homeless and Bruno has
seduced and abandoned her. But that's not what happens. Sonia has a little
apartment refuge for herself and the child, and when Sonia finds Bruno it
becomes clear that he feels genuine warmth toward her. What then? The two of
them, looking like prettier versions of the shaggy gremlins from _Where the
Wild Things Are_, thrive briefly in the disorder of life untrammeled by
middle class luxury and hypocrisy. They enjoy each other and the infant,
somehow making ends meet through Bruno's almost victimless grifts and there
is a sense that we have now found the narrative code for this film: we are
poised for a tale of the innate coherence of family constellations, all the
stronger for a lack of engagement in the hypocrisies of conventional
marriage. But that's not right either, which we understand when Bruno pulls
us up short by selling the baby. Bruno is babysitting, and with hardly a thought that
Sonia should be consulted about this decision, casually trades the baby to
the black market for more money than he is likely to get his hands on any
other way. When Sonia returns and asks for the child, Bruno, proudly
displaying the small fortune now in his possession, tells her that they 'can
have another one'. The ensuing volcanic outrage and despair that grips
Sophia, and Bruno's completely uncomprehending reaction to emotions that he
has never seen in her test the acting skills of Renier and Francois, who more
than justify the enthusiasm the Dardennes expressed in their pressbook about
this pairing. The acting is transcendent, filling the screen with the
complexity upon complexity of human passions at their most primal. The Sonia
that we now see tears through the layers of the charming child-woman who has
been cavorting with Bruno to reveal a torrent of feeling that is as visceral
as the sensation of blood flowing through veins. There is nothing mediated by
culture in her reaction. Watching Sonia respond to Bruno's thinly shallow
sense of paternity is, indeed, like suddenly being in the presence of a
window abruptly cut into her autonomic system. Nevertheless, she is not
simply a mass of involuntary impulses; layering her convulsions is a
conscious rage that is the dawning of the kind of ethical response that had
previously been invisible in her daily life. Bruno is equally captivating once he realizes that he
and Sonia are not on the same page; he is equally on the brink of a life
change of immense magnitude. His immediate, pure disbelief, a term bandied
about loosely that comes to life here with a vengeance as he regards Sonia's
simultaneous explosion and disintegration right before his eyes, suggests he
couldn't be more flabbergasted if he were watching the floor and ceiling
change places. Bruno is neither vicious nor callous. If he were, this film
would be of no consequence whatsoever. He is, instead, on a paradoxical
manhood odyssey. Bruno at this point in the film lives by his instincts and
wits almost like an animal and at the same time he is the opposite of man in
a state of nature: he is the ultimate consumer who conceives of everything as
saleable. He moves instinctually about urban streets like a wolf sniffing the
wind, a tracker observing the footprints of economic opportunity. And yet the
idea that the baby is not another factory made, interchangeable object is
inconceivable to him. The process by which the materialist glaze in his
innards cracks and breaks and an organic sense of life awakens in him as he
begins to understand Sophia's reaction is the core narrative focus of the
film. Leading us into painful territory, _L'Enfant_ plays out for us an
agonizing transition that translates into a filmic language understood in our
nerve endings and emotions about being a modern person in a materialist
society. Ultimately, each spectator will be the judge of the implications of
the story of Bruno and Sophia. Is this a parable of who we are today, living
short-term lives that throw us back on native instinct, but leave us devoid
of ordinary feelings? Is it an essentialist text that reinstalls the maternal
instinct so painstakingly debunked by reams of constructionist feminist
criticism? Does it, indeed, posit the natural maternal instincts of women as the
fount of ethical understanding? It is, after all, Sophia's spontaneous and
non-negotiable maternal anguish that precipitates the dawning of her own
conscious ethics and Bruno's discovery of a new humanity in himself. Or is
the gendered relationship of femininity to that organic connection with life
simply a matter of the serendipitous aspects of the story? Once again, the
Dardennes have taken us to the brink of inhumanity in order to reassure us
that, if there are no guarantees for happiness, there persists something
unquenchably humane within us. If _L'Enfant_ was inspired by a missing father,
_Gabrielle_ (Dir. Patrice Chereau, France) is a film inspired by a missing
woman, and the perspective is reversed. _Gabrielle_ is the story of Gabrielle
(Isabelle Huppert) and Jean (Pascal Gregory) Hervey, an upper middle class
Parisian couple at the turn of the 20th century. The epitome of bourgeois
wealth and decorum, living in childless elegance in a mansion (fabulous by
all normal standards) and according to exquisitely structured manners and
time constraints -- they are everything that Bruno and Sophia are not.
Moreover, the tale of Gabrielle and Jean is not a tale of the jagged edge of
modern, urban confusion, but rather a tale of the smooth flow of stately early
twentieth-century Parisian civility. This is a life of formal dinner parties
followed by card games, cigars, and brandy in which the raised voice of a
prominent journalist, earnestly expressing an opinion, grates on the ears of
his oh-so refined host, Monsieur Hervey. But Jean's annoyance with this
particularly vulgar newspaperman is not simply one more indication of Jean's
fastidiously high standards made possible by immense wealth. The journalist
is the crack in Jean's world that precipitates a shock of recognition from
which he will never recover. Gauche the journalist may be, but he has his
charms: Jean learns that his perfect wife is having an affair with him.
Sounds like the stuff of pretty standard melodrama, headed toward release
from the repressions of middle class life? It is not. It is a pessimistic
voyage into bourgeois emptiness that depicts the things in the lovely Hervey
mansion as having more life than the Herveys themselves. This film tells the
story of _L'Enfant_ from the other side of the mirror. The peripheral
journalist, barely glimpsed, stands as an innate fountain of humanity from
which the Herveys learn that they are irretrievably exiled. Patrice Chereau adapted _Gabrielle_ from a short story
by Joseph Conrad called 'The Return'. In Conrad's story a woman leaves her
marriage to run off with her lover, and, just as the husband is taking in the
enormity of her disappearance, suddenly returns to him of her own free will
-- but the wife is given no voice, which annoyed and baffled Chereau. As he
told us at the press conference, he found it impossible in the 21st century
to write only from the man's point of view. Fascinated by the story, Chereau
decided to adapt it for the screen, giving the wife parity of expression with
the husband, and a little more. Apparently, to make things up to her, Chereau
decided to call the film by her name instead of using Conrad's title,
although the return is as pivotal to the film as it is the short story.
However, in telling the tale of Gabrielle's unexpected departure and even
more unforeseen return, the director has chosen to avoid other changes that
would bring his film into conformity with the traditions of movie melodrama
that its elements might suggest to another director. Although sexual
repression is written all over this marriage, and the lover is clearly a
passionate man, there is no attempt to build audience identification with the
affair, as in so many films that depict burnt-out marriages, from _Anna
Karenina_ (1935) to _Written on the Wind_ (1956) to _The End of the Affair_
(1999) to _Far From Heaven_ (2002). Generically, the promise of gratification
is at least visible in this kind of film, whether or not we see sexual
consummation, and even though these films tend to deny escape to the lovers at
closure. (In the list above, only _Written on the Wind_ permits its heroine a
way out of a socially sanctified but dead marriage.) In such films, the heavy
hand of society on the individual is evoked as the impediment to personal
fulfillment, always suggesting that within the individual remains the
potential to live according to a more authentic life. In _Gabrielle_, such is
not the case. The lover is glimpsed only in flashes and we never see
Gabrielle with him alone; he is so absent from the life that we as spectators
share with Gabrielle that he exists more as a wedge into Monsieur Hervey's
consciousness than as a source of real pleasure for Madame. When Gabrielle leaves a note for her husband telling him
that she is leaving him for the journalist it becomes clear that the lover's
function is to short-circuit Jean's systems of denial about a marriage
lacking in sexual intimacy and sensual immediacy -- but almost as soon as
Jean is finished reading the note, Gabrielle appears back on their doorstep.
What happens next makes plain that she is as devoid of raw and spontaneous
life as is her husband. He does not stand in the way of her happiness; it is
her internalization of beliefs and ideals, never more than vaguely present as
inauthentic bourgeois values, that dooms her. The final scene, which I will
not reveal (a pun on the title of the short story), suggests that their
greatest intimacy is their collaboration in mutual alienation. Chereau is not
forthcoming in his accusations against 'good society'. The film simply
assumes we have read Henry James and Edith Wharton. In using the lens of the
early 20th century for us to peer through at the state of heterosexual
relations, this gay director seems to define the domestic conventions of an
extremely rigid cultural period as the synecdoche of the marriage
relationship, tendering very harsh judgments on love between men and women,
which comes off here as a very bad charade. It is also worth mentioning that
Chereau has made a very strange decision to, at unexpected places in his
film, use the kind of title cards that conveyed dialogue to audiences
watching silent movies. In _Gabrielle_ the intertitles are reserved for
registering some of the inner voices of the characters and the voice of a
narrator. This functions as a distancing device and further drives home the
point of view of the film that sees Gabrielle's and Jean's emotional and
sexual sterility as an incurable attack of artificiality. However, the
performances by Huppert and Gregory are devastating and the film is so
beautiful to look at that my mind's eye is still panning up and down the
'bestatued' stone and marble staircases of the Hervey mansion. Issues of constructed social values and organic
experiences of love, as well as the operation of differing kinds of social
constraints in different time periods, are also factors in _Three Times_
(Dir. Hou Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan), a beautifully nuanced film made up of three
short love stories from different time periods. In the order in which they
appear in the film, the three stories take place in 1966, 1911, and 2005. All
three pairs are played by the same actors: Shu Qi and Chang Chen. The first
romance, titled 'A Time for Love', concerns a pool hall girl and a sailor.
The second romance, titled 'A Time for Freedom', concerns a politically
conscious scholar from a prominent, conservative family and a concubine. The
third romance, titled 'A Time for Youth', concerns a bisexual rock singer and
a man who works in a digital photo shop, as well as the lovers with whom each
of them is currently involved. All the stories take place in Taiwan. 'A Time for Love'
unfolds in southern Taiwan, in the Kaohsiung region; 'A Time For Freedom'
takes place in Dadaocheng, an area in Taipai; and 'A Time for Youth', takes
place in urban Taipai. The three stories are studies in fluidity, rigidity,
and motion, as well as film technology and conventions; the possibilities for
love and communication vary as the speed of life and the ability of the
camera to penetrate intimate situations fluctuate. 'A Time for Love', set in
the period when director Hou was nineteen years old, is the most idyllic of
the three. Possibly this tale of fortuitous coincidences recollects fond
memories of an era. The odds are against the hero and heroine ever meeting,
let alone finding time and space in which to conduct a love affair. Both are
in perpetual motion, he as a sailor, deployed where he is sent, she as a pool
girl, who moves from billiard parlor to billiard parlor for no evident
reason. They meet by chance just before he is about the ship out and has come
to look for the pool girl who preceded her. They seem to float on the current
of life, somehow meeting up as he searches for her, suggesting that the
languid pace of their ceaseless peregrinations makes love miraculously
possible for them at last. Hou's camera and narrative flow similarly through
charming scenes primarily set outside, but always suggesting access to
freedom of movement. 'A Time for Freedom', is an ironic title as it does not
take place in a time of freedom, but rather in an epoch crying out for some
force to make possible a release from the rigidity of class-structured life
in Dadaocheng. The sexes lack parity in this tale: he is free to move in
revolutionary circles while her movement is restricted by her well-defined
place as a beautifully dressed concubine, serving in the beautifully
furnished home of a wealthy family. Because the story takes place in 1911,
Hou has wittily decided to make it a silent movie. There is no synchronized
sound dialogue in this segment; the speech of the characters is presented
through printed intertitle cards. This technique underscores the difficulty
of communication between the hero and heroine, and the claustrophobic feeling
of this melancholy tale, which restricts the spectator to beautiful, enclosed
spaces from which the outside world seems distant indeed. Similarly, the hero
and heroine spend their time together enclosed within hermetically sealed
selves, revealing almost nothing of their feelings for or about each other,
as the exploration of their faces reveals the unspoken to the audience. 'A Time for Youth' closes _Three Times_ with the
frenzied movement of a world high on drugs and criss-crossed at demonic
speeds by motorcycles. The interiors in this segment are dark and
claustrophobic, high-tech in their design and virtually forbidding people to
live within their confines. But no one does anyhow. Home is a pitstop between
blind and fast-paced bouts of careening around the streets. Nor is there a
sense of the stability of sexuality here. The heroine is a bisexual singer,
leading an erotically chaotic life in which her desires lead her fitfully
between her female lover and the hero. He has a female lover too, whom he
betrays as his passions overwhelm all other considerations of loyalty. Night
and day lose their definition as periods of rest and work because of the
after-hours nature of rock clubs, and the confusions fostered by drugs. The
blindness of the social setting is given a literal dimension in the
encroaching medical condition of blindness afflicting the singer. The title
of this segment does not celebrate 2005 as an era of youthful exuberance, but
rather as cursed moment which the culture at large replicates the anguished
instability of youth. The cinematography and narrative embody a youthful
disorientation in the wild aesthetic of 'unpleasure' in this segment, which
combines high speed editing with highly elliptical storytelling, in sharp
contrast with the stately motion of events in 'A Time for Freedom', and the
floating sensation of narrative progress in 'A Time for Love'. Those familiar with Hong Kong film will be particularly
interested in the scope Hou gives Shu Qi and Chang Chen to display their
versatility as they move among time periods. Shu Qi, a former model who began
her life in film as the 'Bridget Bardot of Hong Kong movies', has previously
given ample evidence that she is interested in being an actress. I
particularly like her nuanced, no holds barred performance as 'Scarface' (of all
things!), a desperate but still feisty drug addict in _Portland Street Blues_
(1998). But here she dazzles with her chameleon ability to completely
transform herself from a willowy, wary, affectionate pool girl; to an
elegantly mannered but trapped concubine; and finally to an out-of-control
woman on the verge of a physical and emotional breakdown. Though he cannot
equal Shu Qui's acting pyrotechnics (by virtue of the way the roles are
constructed), Chang Chen, who has done some work for Wong Kar-Wai in enigmatic
supporting roles in _Happy Together_ (1997) and _2046_ (2004), acquits
himself very well. Here he demonstrates his ability to carry a movie as a
leading man, as he transforms himself from a sweet natured sailor to a
thoughtful but strong willed scholar and finally to an action hero living at
full throttle. _Three Times_ is a *tour de force* of cinematic
textures. But it is also a lament that since the lifting of the impossibly
constricting old customs, an inverse cultural imbalance has resulted. The
privileged moment of grace in the late 1960s has yielded to the ugly and
relentless tyranny of centrifugal technology over humanity as the successor
to the brittle prisons of decorum of the old days. Interestingly, Hou seems
to depict women as the primary victims of the cultural extremes he portrays. Children are the primary victims of the two films with
which I will close Part 2 of my report on the New York Film Festival 2005: _I
Am_ (Dir. Dorota Kedzierzawska, Poland) and _Cache_ (Dir. Michael Haneke,
Austria and France). The central character of Kedzierzawska's _I Am_ is an
11-year-old boy named Kundel (Piotr Jagielski), facing serious problems at
every turn, and by himself. The director, much influenced by Andrei Tarkovsky
(a Post-Soviet director in spirit before the Soviet system in fact
collapsed), follows him through her quiet contemplation of the mise-en-scene,
and also in her dismissal of the old Communist-mandated attributions of
suffering only to economic causes. Certainly, Kundel, whose mother has
abandoned him, and who is threatened by the casual exploitation that is a way
of life for people living on the street, is menaced by the same
commodification of life depicted by the Dardennes in _L'Enfant_. He takes
refuge in the squalor of the rundown boat house on the property of a
mean-spirited bourgeois family, and he makes ends meet by bringing salvage to
a scruffy, wily old salvage man whose shrewd business practices would do any
middle class entrepreneur proud. But Kedzierzawska is interested in much more
than Capitalist-spawned inhumanity. She sees in Kundel an innate goodness, unrelated to the
material circumstances of his life. Kundel's story is an articulation of the
dynamics of his goodness, for Kundel naturally calls forth the essential nature
of everyone with whom he comes in contact and reveals thereby the imbalances
in the world that have nothing to do with how society is structured. There
are economics and there is the enigma of cosmic tides of fortune and
misfortune unbidden by individual or social initiative or lack thereof. In
the spirit of the Book of Job, Kundel is unlucky and he has done nothing to
provoke the afflictions heaped on him. And while society can take credit for
much of the ugliness in this film, it doesn't explain why it is Kundel and
not someone else who is in his position. Kundel's mother is a sensual and
attractive woman, but one totally devoid of grace, hysterically seeking for a
sense of worth in the arms of men who think of her as an ignorant whore. She
left Kundel as an infant, and does it again when he tracks her down, because
it is not in her to nurture him. _I Am_ makes it impossible to attribute her
pathetic and horrible emptiness to environmental causes, because Kundel,
similarly afflicted in his external circumstances radiates from within with
caring warmth, which he lavishes on Kuleczka, the neglected 10-year-old
daughter of the family in whose boat house he has found shelter. When Kundel
arrives on their property, Kuleczka, lonely and depressed, has found solace
in alcohol, she is a pre-teen drunkard, inebriated most of the day with beer
she takes surreptitiously from the family larder. Her parents, otherwise
occupied, take no notice. Her icily pretty older teen-aged sister doesn't
care, or, more accurately, she cares in the wrong way. Kuleczka's friendship
with Kundel renders her drinking unnecessary and permits her to reveal an
inner wisdom and warmth that sustains the boy as he sustains her. But the
older sister perversely needs to destroy the beauty of a relationship of
which she would be incapable. As these impulses of an innately afflicted
humanity play out, the greatness of what is good in the human race asserts
itself without a forced narrative collapse into sentimentality and impossible
resolutions of deeply seated problems. If you cry at movies, prepare your
hankies, but don't expect to be depressed, for Kedziersawska makes us feel,
at least for the time that _I Am_ is onscreen, that there is nothing stronger
or more enduring than the secret that nourishes Kundel's soul. Conversely, in Michael Haneke's _Cache_ (aka _Hidden_),
which I must say up front looks like it is heavily influenced by the surface
images but not the spirit of David Lynch's _Lost Highway_, relentlessly asks
us to face a world in which goodness is in short supply and, in any case, is
ineffective. The film, chosen to be screened on the closing night of the
Festival, is saved by Haneke's cool mastery of the vocabulary of cinema from
wallowing in abjection, but it's not a date movie. The film begins by
churning up issues of reflexivity and it continues to play hide and seek with
the audience. The first shot is a long, long take of a city street which
turns out to be a film within the film, a videotape from a surveillance
camera trained on the home of a delightfully affluent intellectual couple who
seem to have it all: Georges (Daniel Auteuil) and Anna (Juliette Binoche)
Laurent. They live in beautifully furnished comfort in Paris with their
handsome, bright, suitably rebellious teen-aged son, Pierrot (Lester
Makedonsky). The confusion between videotape of their street and images of
their street in the mise-en-scene of the film initiates an interplay between
reality (the reality of the film) and images that reproduce reality which
threads the entire story. Narratively, numerous taped reproductions of life
occur because the Laurents are attempting (in vain) to find out who is
leaving them videotapes of their home that bear increasingly sinister images. What no one has mentioned, to my knowledge, not even
Haneke in a recent interview in the _New York Times_ in which he speaks about
this movie, is that Lynch's _Lost Highway_ also begins with an attractive,
though much less happily married couple, who live well in Los Angeles, and
who are also plagued by the appearance of videotapes of their home. Moreover,
_Lost Highway_ begins with a voice saying, over a security intercom system,
'Dick Laurent is dead', and that same sentiment is voice multiple times, over
an intercom. There is one moment, uncanny for me, when, in _Cache_, a
statement (but not that he is dead) is similarly made over phone about
Georges Laurent. I would certainly be interested in hearing from anyone who
has anything to say about this similarity that seems unlikely to be an accident.
(Michael Haneke, if you are listening, perhaps you are willing to talk about
this.) However, while Lynch has insisted to me, and I believe him, that his
darkest film is nevertheless not a statement of hopelessness, arguably
_Cache_ is, not only by Haneke's own account, but by virtue of the experience
of the film itself. As more tapes arrive, the images they bear take on a
fantasy quality, and ultimately trigger memories in Georges about his
childhood. It would be too cruel to rob anyone of the chilling suspense
Haneke builds as Georges is forced to remember, but it is necessary to point
out that, although there is racism involved in the incidents of long ago that
have come back to haunt Georges, jealousy and simple human perversity gets
far more play as the active ingredients in an old dark deed. Haneke, like the
other filmmakers we have been attending to here, discounts social constructs
as the foundation of human action, cruelty, and unhappiness. As I see it, he
makes this absolutely clear when Georges becomes the witness to a death under
circumstances that make all our Hitchcockian alarm bells sound. Surely,
Georges will be persecuted by the law as a murderer because of some very
damning circumstantial evidence at the scene of the crime of which he is innocent,
and that will be his punishment for old . . . But no, the law, in a perfectly
rational way, discounts Georges as a possible assailant. But in a way that is
beyond the law, Georges is responsible for the death and the film devises a
punishment for him that will also be administered by a means beyond the scope
of legal authority, and beyond the scope of our usual expectations. It is my
interpretation that the spectre of Georges's punishment to come drifts into
the film almost as an afterthought under the final credits, and it portends a
cruel comeuppance, the nightmare of every upper middle class intellectual
come true. For me we are left with the knowledge of a situation that may well
destroy Georges and Anna -- whether or not they ever make the discovery we do
in the final, offhand frames. For the past three decades, the fear expressed most by
serious media scholars has been that the naturalization of human behavior in
the representations of mass culture entertainment inevitably supports the
naturalization of long held, vicious, but clearly absurd beliefs that work in
favor of the domination of property owning male power, and victimize
marginalized people, women, and, we might add, children, animals, and the
environment. The films discussed above support the intuitive experience of
most people that the wholesale rejection of *any and every* belief in innate
humanity only propels learned discourse in an extreme direction opposite to
the extremities of, to take a clear example, the social views of the pioneer
American filmmaker D. W. Griffith. In its way, and I would argue powerfully,
_L'Enfant_ speaks truth to culturally constructed power without rejecting
belief in an inner reserve of humanity that can escape social conditioning.
So too _Three Times_, _I Am_, _Cache_, and even _Gabrielle_, though, as I see
it, it is the Dardennes who are leading this charge into the uncharted
regions of the heart. New York, New York, USA Copyright © Film-Philosophy 2005 Martha P. Nochimson, 'Five International Cinematic
Perspectives on the 'Nature' of Love and Childhood: New York Film Festival
2005 Report (Part Two)', _Film-Philosophy_, vol. 9 no. 45, November 2005
<http://www.film-philosophy.com/vol9-2005/n45nochimson>. |
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