Friday Review
Bangalore
Chennai and Tamil Nadu
Delhi
Hyderabad
Thiruvananthapuram
Emotionally unified
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The Vivre Ensemble section at the Bengalooru International Film Festival screened some interesting films
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PHOTO: BHAGYA PRAKASH K.
KALEDIOSCOPE There was a festive mood at the venue with young hopefuls scampering from screen to screen
Film festivals are strictly
for junkies who
crave their annual fix.
You eat, sleep, talk,
smoke and drink cinema.
It's like a family function.
There are those who use
terms like existentialism
(yes they still do) and those
who look for meanings the
director never meant to
convey. There are still the
stereotypes, clothes, language
and everything else.
There are also the young
hopefuls scampering from
screen to screen not wanting
to miss a single scene.
It's a window to a world of
varied cultures, different
dialects and a maze of varied
moods. The one thing
you realise is that even
though there is a kaleidoscope
of cultures, emotions
are the same
whichever corner of the
world you inhabit.
"When You Come Down
From Heaven" is like a typical
Indian film. It's about
an upright, small town guy
coming to the big bad city
to supplement his mother's
resources. He's hired
by the Town Hall to pick up
the homeless and abandon
them in the wilderness. He
makes friends with a lovable
vagabond and his
moral resolve to revolt is
strengthened when his pal
gets the same treatment.
He's helped by a female
cub reporter out to prove
herself.
The film plods along predictably
with a few interesting
scenes. The acting is
above average with the guy
who plays the vagabond
stealing the scene. He reminds
you of the great Gerard
Depardieu.
"Zim And Co." is about a
hyperactive kid who works
in the market and also
plays the guitar in a band at
night whose life changes
thanks to a freak accident.
He's given an ultimatum
by the cops to get a regular
job or spend time in the
slammer. He finds a job but
needs a car. He's helped by
his childhood pals but is
conned by a fake car dealer.
Now the kid is caught between
taking the right path
and the wrong.
This film is an interesting
look at relationships be
it mother and son or between
friends. The pace is
not soporific and the acting
is excellent.
The one thing our filmmakers
have to learn is the
judicious use of background
score which is common
in all the films being
shown.
"Flanders" directed by
Bruno Dumont is brilliant.
A farm hand in the interiors
of France who treats
his girlfriend as just an object
for sex triggers off negative
emotions in her due
to his inability to express
himself emotionally. She
starts sleeping with any
man in sight and gets pregnant
when he's away at
war.
The director uses brutal
war scenes to show the
mental bruises it can leave.
The dichotomy between
the verdant, serene farm
and the heartless violence
that's war is stark.
The shot taking is brilliant
be it the endless
greenery covered with
snow or the tough dusty
terrain in which the war is
being fought.
The violence is graphic
and in your and show the
futility of all the
bloodshed. It effectively
shows how war turns man
into a mindless killer.
Adeliede Leroux gives a
standout performance as
the female protagonist.
S. SHIVA KUMAR
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Friday Review
Bangalore
Chennai and Tamil Nadu
Delhi
Hyderabad
Thiruvananthapuram
|