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As if from an Asian Swell
A Rising Tide of Brazilian Masterpieces
Blame
only your curiosity if you’ve failed to notice it. Over the past
ten years the eyes of creative filmmakers and film theorists alike
have been set on Central and East Asia. Perspective lines have
focused right. East Asian cinema—in Japan, China, Hong-Kong and
Taiwan—has been challenging Western conceptions of beauty and
narrative form. Wherever the infrastructure to project foreign films
has not been exterminated, it has won over audiences of cinemaphiles
the world over. On that issue, the American-Hollywood conglomerates,
who spread their management doctrines to the film theaters, have
banked their money and contract signatures to decide on what films
you get to see. And whenever they can help it, those films aren’t
from abroad.
The
Asian tigers may have refined art just as they renewed collective
capitalism. Yet nothing compares with the outstanding production of
Iranian cinema. No other country over the past ten years has
contributed so prolifically to retracing the boundaries of the
audiovisual art; no other culture has challenged the dictates of the
post-modern American medley, welding consumerized business
principles to artistic creation, as has the land of Attar and
Hedayat.
A
Camera in the Passenger’s Seat
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Mohsen Makhmalbaf. One of Iran’s most creative directors |
Many
Westerners are convinced of the repressive nature of Iranian society
in the aftermath of the Shiite revolution. But how do you equate the
following situation:
In
the US, the self-declared bastion of free speech and art, the
majority of film viewers are deprived of exposure to the world’s
greatest films. They are force-fed a monopolistic potpourri of that
ol’ ultra-violence, voyeuristic nudity and fantasy representation
to such a degree that Hollywood became a synonym of an insult to
intelligence. Whereas in Iran you may find an astonishing depiction
of a millenary civilization whose past contributions to the arts and
sciences were left unexceeded even by Rome.
This
is a culture bursting into high-tech modernity, although one that
refuses to merely be co-opted into the Western system of
representation and value.
American
cinema no longer has anything to teach the Iranians. Not only are we
the ones
who have all to learn from them, it’s learning to learn from them
which has become our work. Our incessant exposure to insipid
commercial products has warped our minds. The beats that pound in
our hearts echo to a war cry. This is why seeking out the films of
the contemporary Iranian masters is a duty not only to art, but to
thought.
Islamist
Iran never put the great filmmakers Abbas Kiarostami or Mohsen
Makhmalbaf in jail. Yet Makmalbaf was tortured at the hands of the
Shah’s US-trained and funded secret police. As for Kiarostami, he
had to await an invitation from freedom’s bastion to be denied the
right to speak. Last summer he was refused entry into the US as he
planned to attend an homage to his life’s work, organized by
Harvard University no less.
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A scene from Makhmalbaf’s
Kandahar |
The
timeliness of Makhmalbaf’s film Kandahar and publication of his
film journal have given us more information and wisdom on the plight
of Afghan society than the hundreds of hours of ideological soup
produced by CNN and its cronies. If that wasn’t enough, he has
brought up one of the shining lights of young Iranian cinema, his
own daughter, Samira, already the director of two critically
acclaimed features.
For
just cause the film works of Kiarostami and Makhmalbaf, among
several others, whisper in the same breath as 1940’s Italian
Neo-Realism. Their filming strategy allows the real to supervene and
emerge autonomously from the human agents who set about its
creation. With its release coinciding with the bombing of
Afghanistan, art matched up fully with the real in the film Kandahar. Form spoke transparently to those intent on gazing.
As
a real living object, Makhmalbaf’s work took an even more ominous
turn. It appeared that Tabid Sahib, playing the medical doctor in Kandahar, was living out a film within the film. An American ex-pat
at other times known as David Belfield, he is allegedly involved
with the assassination of an ancien-regime Iranian diplomat in the
late seventies. Upon conversion to Islam, he took the name of Daoud
Salah Addine and escaped to Iran. The nom-de-plume of Hassan Tantai
launched his acting career. Spot the fiction, if you can.
Whether
Makhmalbaf would have still hired him had he known of the actor’s
involvement in a political murderer, the director stood tall.
Governments tend to pardon political crimes when committed against
injustice, why would the filmmaker act the moralist?
Faced
with the most fascinating moral issue to burst from the art world
since Giuliani banned the Sensations exhibit, the American Academy
of the Motion Picture Arts and Sciences decided to do the public’s
philosophical work. After winning Cannes’s Ecumenical Jury prize
in 2001, and a sure-set nominee for the Best Foreign Film category,
Makhmalbaf’s masterpiece was dropped from the roster. As it’s a
foreign film, the issue of censorship was never raised. For when it
comes to foreign films, they’re already earmarked for censorship
by commercial and linguistic interests. So where does the globalized
world begin?
Cinema
Novo
Brazil is teaching the world a lesson in deliberative democracy. |
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A
brand of exclusion stands equally for the rising tide of Brazilian
cinema masterpieces. Those interested in Brazil’s golden year of
2002 have had to search long and hard to find information on the
country. In every article where the New York Times South America
correspondent links the word “leftist” to newly-elected
president Lula da Silva, and uses innuendo to twist the sense of
“anti-globalization former metalworker union leader,” a thousand
people lose out on the chance to view a Brazilian film.
Sure
Brazil’s World Cup victory was celebrated in the international
press. And if you live in Europe or NYC you’ve probably had the
opportunity of getting familiar with some of Brazil’s recent
musical creation—crafted either by exiles or natives. But it only
takes a bat to flutter its wings for a glance to be sidelined.
When
handsomely paid correspondents are the henchmen to belittle foreign
cultures, how easy is it to keep an open mind and broaden it
evermore towards creation of these cultures? As with Iran, how many
are aware of the outstanding years of cinematic creation the country
has lived?
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Glauber Rocha |
The
background to this creation is far different from the Cinema Novo
movement of the 1960s, spearheaded by the late Glauber Rocha. It had
given Brazilian art its international laurels in a century pierced
with thorns. The country was then under a harsh military
dictatorship. To quell the mounting social and political revolution
of 1968, the generals increased the brutality. Glauber Rocha’s
films express the desperation of an entire generation seeing itself
severed from the international youth movement.
Sprouting
minds were forced to keep living under a centralized hold on power
that set the country back to the nineteenth century latifúndios
in terms of political freedom. In reaction, these minds grew into
radicals and revolutionaries, unleashing as they did the state’s
violence. Use of torture became commonplace. The rest of Latin
America turned to authoritarian rule as its landed aristocracy
crushed the will to reform and distribute wealth either in the
fields or the cities. The early years of Brazil’s military rule
seem polite in comparison.
Nowadays
Brazil is teaching the world a lesson in deliberative democracy. Its
society is still gnawed severely by rampant inequality and the
environmental catastrophe of desertification in the North-East
states. Residents of its largest cities live in a continual state of
preparation for violence wrought by a generation of youth with
nothing to lose but a snort of glue or coke and padding their
pockets with the green bill. Still, this country has historically
ushered into power a government with a potential to introduce social
change on a scale not seen since Chile’s Salvador Allende assumed
power by popular vote in 1970.
It’s
against this contemporary background that, ever since Walter
Salles’ surprise Oscar victory in the best Foreign Film for Central Station (Central do
Brasil), every month has seen a steady
flow of high-level cinematic creation. And every semester has
ushered in a masterpiece.
Brazilian
Masterpieces
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Hans Staden is one of the best films depicting early Amerindian life in Latin America. |
Brazilian
intellectuals long ago understood that art was incorporation,
cannibalism. Failure to ingest leads a nation’s art to wilt from
depression, if not explode in fury.
Nor
has the country been spared the ravages of globalized shareholder
capitalism. After all, its ruling financial clique has been among
the IMF’s star players in market deregulation. Still, as if on a
bas-relief, Brazilian cinema has become political only in a broader
sense. Were one to consider three bona fide cases, Hans Staden,
Behind the Sun (Abril Despedaçado), or the greatest Brazilian
international success since Dona Flor and her Two Husbands, City of
God (Cidade de Deus), all of these films are set in the past.
Luiz
Alberto Pereira’s Hans Staden is based on the autobiographical
account of a German explorer and adventurer of the same name
published in 1557. It recounts the explorer’s plight at the hands
of a Tupinambá tribe on the coast of what was to become São
Paulo state.
Staden
had in fact learned the language, a trading lingua franca, after
three years in Brazil. I can think of no film so intelligently
designed on earlier Amerindian life that has been produced in either
Canada or the US. Hans Staden’s nobility is acknowledged by the
Tupis, the privilege of which for a prisoner is to be eaten. The
Tupis grace the “Friesian” explorer with foremost hospitality.
He is given a wife and allowed full participation in daily and
spiritual life, as he awaits his fateful moment. When illness starts
ravaging the tribe, Hans Staden not only steals his fate by fleeing
to Europe, he witnesses the future devastation that disease would
inflict on all American native nations without exception.
Whereas
the name of most art patrons are lost within the stone, paint and
glass of which their funds release the creation, Walter Salles
passed his patronym onto cinema in the work of his sons. In Behind
the Sun, Walter sets a story written by Albanian author Ismael
Kandare in the legendary sertão backlands. It’s an
historical journey into the gang-related violence today tearing
apart Brazil’s urban fabric. It focuses on the plight of two clans
condemned by the Law of Talion to seek retribution generation after
murdered generation for the killing of past loved ones.
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Behind the Sun sheds light on the violence afflicting Brazil’s urban life. |
Walter Carvalho’s astonishing work as director of photography
should incite the reader to see his own documentary on blindness,
featuring Hermeto Pascoal and Wim Wenders. Indeed, Brazil’s
documentary production has been second to none. The outstanding
films discussed above may innovate on fiction, representation and
narrative through historical palettes. But the documentary
form—whether classically demarcated or integrated into fictional
narratives—borrows present-time as its instrument for staining
tears with blood.
As
a blood banquet, City of God reaches paradisiacal heights of filmic
expression. Dovetailing so many features composing this rising tide
of cinema, its historical backtracking encapsulates what Brazil’s
current renaissance is all about. The samba and the funk, the
poverty and rebellion, intensify the grind of living in two of the
hemisphere’s largest cities, need I say megalopolises. Much is
still being written on the film and its social import, and more will
surely be said. When I think of its hip action, and its sanguine
humanism, I grow into a victim, subdued by the syncopation of
legendary samba composer and cantor, Cartola.
His
Psalm of Psalms beckons to art “Chora, disfarça e
chora”—Weep, disguise and weep. And I do so neither because of
what lies in the film’s content, nor owing to what might attack
from without the cinema’s doors. No, I cry and clap and scream
because art exceeds life here in neo-realist form, stepped up by a
high-tech increment. The result has City of God reaching into the
pantheons of creation and eternity, as if set afloat on Yemanja’s
barque gliding beyond the underworld.
America’s
Pulp Fiction
American cinema has become a medium for arrogant self-portrait. |
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Excuse
me for flogging the poverty of American cinema to a pulp fiction.
It’s a lesson that
so many Brazilians also have yet to wake up to and learn. With the
exception of David Lynch, American cinema has become a medium
organized only for the ideological dissemination of triumphalist
abnegation. With every additional Gladiator thrown at a crowd
starved for art, Hollywood continues in its pathetic and arrogant
American self-portrait, forever in denial over the fact that its
country is now nothing less than an Empire.
Caught
in the web of the victim-hero complex, Americans suffer raw of being
art-deprived by the commercial control on what gets to be shown and
advertised in their homeland secure. They prove to the world that,
vis-à-vis their state, the population acts so often in complicity.
For lack of political opposition, Americans underwrite the nightmare
their current administration is forging around the world. The real
scenario there is of intensified poverty, spread of war and hatred,
and a deregulated environment. Washington intellectuals seem unable
to look at these outgrowths with clear eyes, were their spirits
imbued with reading Chicago School economics and attending
Georgetown University foreign policy lectures.
Norman
Madarasz is a Canadian philosopher residing in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. With a Ph.D. from the University of
Paris, he frequently writes on international North-South relations
and on the political economy and culture of Brazil. He is also a
regular contributor to Counterpunch and has published think pieces
and philosophical research extensively. You can reach him at nmphdiol@yahoo.ca
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