Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Leviathan


I’m consumed by the Film Festival – what wealth for the mind to chomp on! Just home from Leviathan by Russian AndreyZvyaginstev, that had rave reviews from Cannes 2014.
Don’t you just love it when a word drives you to the dictionary!
I did know Leviathan had connotations of ‘whale’ and is the name of political philosopher Thomas Hobbes greatest book (the latter because the Film Festival booklet told me so). 
To quote the booklet, Hobbes says without good government and an organised society, life would be ‘nasty, brutish and short’.
Well, armed with the booklet’s blurb, off I trotted to the movies with my friend.
I wasn’t at all prepared for the austere allegory that unfolded in such mythical proportions and its deeply contemplative cinematography. I certainly hadn’t bargained for watching the main character turn into, step by relentless step, a biblical Job as he was stripped of everything everyman or everywoman might hold dear. All with a few good laughs along the way.



 So when I came home I dived into google to better understand the word Leviathan’, as well as to fathom the meaning of ‘allegory’.
Leviathan is indeed a monster of the sea. Melville in his novel Moby Dick talks of the white whale in these terms. 


But the deeper meanings lie within an ancient Jewish tradition that is treated at length in the Book of Job.
If you lay a hand on him, you will remember the struggle and never do it again!
Any hope of subduing him is false; the mere sight of him is overpowering.
No-one is fierce enough to rouse him. Who then is able to stand against me?

And then we also have the Leviathan of the Christians in the  Middle Ages, who used this idea to describe Satan who  endangered  both God's creatures—by attempting to eat them—and God's creation—by threatening it with upheaval in the waters of Chaos.(Wikipaedia)
So the concept of a Leviathan is scarey stuff!

Allegory is a word I’ve always found hard to define. But good old Wikipaedia tells us it is an art form in whose characters and events represent ideas and concepts. ‘ it’s immense power is to illustrate complex ideas and concepts in ways that are easily digestible and tangible to its viewers’ …. It acts like an extended metaphor.

In the film, contemporary Russia with its corrupt politicians, police and priests populate the story of a poor man and his friends. All the characters feel fully realized. However they are also ciphers that hold bigger ideas. The personal is very political, yet metaphysical too. While the cruel Fates toy with individual lives, the director delights in black social comedy and utilises a classic thriller formula. Danger stalks many scenes but always comes in when we – or the characters - might expect it least. The social mores of these northerners were laid open like a knife cutting through flesh. The gender constructs of what it means to be a man or woman were appalling from a feminist Kiwi’s viewpoint. Guns, vodka and casual domestic violence were the order of the day.

Revealing the older ideas behind Leviathan, means we as an audience can come  to understand that any individuals who dare attempt to resist the powers of a monster corrupt state and church will definitely come to no good. This film contemplates the dis-empowerment of the little people by the Leviathan of the greater system that is Putin’s Russia.
Tragedy reels under the foreboding and forbidding quarries of a northern fishing town, on the shores of the wild writhing Barrents Sea.  This allegory is a poetic, cinematic journey that is driven by ferocious rage and visionary grandeur. This is a masterpiece of movie-making that will reverberate in my consciousness for a long while.
Postscript: It’s deeply ironic that given the Jewish ancestry of the concept of Leviathan, Israel has become a modern Leviathan against which the embattled Palestinians are fighting. The ghastly, tragic genocidal war being waged in Gaza against an entire people can be seen as an extended metaphor of the story of an Arabic Job being waged by the implacable Chosen People.

Saturday, 26 July 2014

Watchers of The Sky



I'm immersed in Auckland's International Film Festival. Prepare yourself for reviews and critiques. To begin I want everyone to go see this movie.....

Watchers Of The Sky

 If movies were gems, then Watchers of the Sky is a diamond. The film is about Raphael Lemkin who was nominated 7 times for the Noble Prize for Peace without success. He was born at the beginning of last century and suffered the fate of so many European Jewish people’s horrific tribulations, but survived. He spent the rest of his life attempting to convince the international community to specially prosecute crimes against humanity and coined the word genocide. His work in the movie is paralleled by that of 4 living modern-day champions of justice. The audience is taken through a compelling journey of the last 100 years of mass ethnic, religious and political exterminations. We cover ground from Nuremburg to Rwanda, from Bosnia to Dafur – as well as visits to the United Nations and more. The session I attended was sparsely populated as obviously this is not a topic many wish to reflect upon.

And yet as horrible as the content was, this movie was uplifting and deeply beautiful. We were not spared the crimes committed or the footage of evidence. Yet this film is art at its best. The belief in and perseverance of the human spirit shone through such nerve-wracking material. I left the cinema feeling subdued but not overwhelmed. It has affected my thinking profoundly.

Apparently the movie was a decade in the making and assembled from 800 hours of original footage – plus the archival materials. The realities of what we were shown were counter-balanced by lyrical ink-watercolour-styled animation illustrating Lemkin’s life, writings and causes. The music was haunting, melancholy, evocative. The voices of these remarkable heroes of law and peace from different nationalities are compelling. They command our honour and love. Each courageous champion fighting in their different ways for human law to prevail in the face of the banality of evil.

The United Nations and the Court of International Law are flawed. Someone described our behaviour as a global species as ‘primitive”. It surely is.
Yet Lemkin and these others are pioneers in providing humanity with new conceptual frameworks for global co-operation. Humanity must learn to prevent criminals who exercise total power over their sovereign nations. Turning a blind eye always results in more violence and more suffering. We must try to make Justice prevail so barbarity does not.


These people are stars who shine like diamonds in our dark sky.
In this film, suffering – indescribable suffering - is turned over and made meaning of. This movie is like a diamond, reflecting every vibrant hue of light, despite its formation from the dark matter of genocide and war. The eons of tons of pressure of human pain and perseverance succeeds in transforming the black into a translucent jewel. Edet Belzberg and her extraordinary crew have gifted the world a radiant piece of art. Time and suffering reveal an inner radiance of meaning - a diamond that will last forever. 
I urge you to see this film.
 

Friday, 25 July 2014

Words of Wisdom from the Fool....

Mythbusting




Look the Emperor has no clothes...
Anti-establishment, agent provocateur, poking fun.
Misfit, marginalised, silly, idealistic, naive, unconventional.
Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.
Let's play!