archive for October 07


london calling

Monday, October 29th, 2007

Matt and I went to the NFT to see our last London Film Festival event: a collection of shorts called London Calling. We had a pleasant surprise and bumped into Abbie and Helen too and  had a drink with them afterwards. Helen had a marvellous black dress thing on that she was worried about but which definitely suited her very well. It was an unusual garment though.

I think it was one of the best collections of shorts I’ve seen – ranging from two teenage girls committing suicide by jumping out of the Barbican in “Wish”, to a young gardener and an older Polish immigrant doing a day’s work together in “Border Work”, to a young Chinese girl’s grandma flying over from China to visit her and spread tendrils of colourful animation everywhere in “Monkey Nut Tales”, to a fabulous sci fi animation called “N.O.R.A.” about disobedient robots being sent to a planet to die, nothing to do with London, but great. There were two scary girls in “The Girls” who terrorise their father but don’t actually kill him, though you are scared they might at any moment. There was “Peter and Ben”, about a man and his imprinted sheep, and the close humorous touching relationship between them. And there was “Cherries”, like an English version of Battle Royale, I liked it, the others thought it was silly.

valzer

Friday, October 19th, 2007

Alex and I met up with Charles and his friend Fabio at BFI Southbank last night to see Valzer, a cool Italian film shot in one take over the course of a day in a hotel.

The central characters are the hotel staff, particularly a maid having an interesting and emotional confrontation with the father of one of her ex-colleagues. The father has been in prison for years and has been exchanging letters with the maid thinking that she was his daughter. The hotel staff are all doing their best to live meaningful lives on low wages, surrounded by a range of extremely rich corrupt guests, from big Italian busty models to football magnates discussing how to rig their games to a sociological expert who lectures the football magnates on how best to manipulate the common people through sport and TV so that their lives become so cold and empty that they will do whatever they are told.

The film is really good at painting a comic but depressing world of bleak corruption that the drama of the humble central characters is played out against. The decision to shoot it all in one take makes for a particularly engrossing feeling of being sucked into one tight evolving story.

one hundred nails

Friday, October 19th, 2007

After Valzer, we saw another Italian film, this time a subtle humorous anti-Christian tale of a young theology professor who looks exactly like Jesus, and the film doesn’t try to hide that everyone thinks he looks like Jesus too. It’s hard to take away any one message or point the film might have been trying to make, but it seems that the professor decides his life spent poring over religious books is meaningless and in one magnificent act of vandalism he drives nails through a hundred priceless books in the lofty library that he and his colleagues share. The rest of the film is about him as he flees to stay with a small squatter community by a village on the banks of the River Po, who fall in love with him as the police close gradually in.

The film is actually quite funny and light, but shot through with amazing moments of lyrical beauty, where the professor will rise to the occasion and bring forth some biblical or anti-biblical truth about life and authentic experience. There’s a great line where he asks the sergeant questioning him: “how many books have you read? ten? in your whole life? when you look back through your life what do you see? when I look back, all I see is books”

At that moment I think all of us in audience who have read far too many books suddenly had a pang of abject existential fear!