Daily Tiger #9 (English)

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HEARTOF THETIGER photo: Bram Belloni

43rd International Film Festival Rotterdam #9 Friday 31 January 2014

Happy times at CineMart: Paulo Benzi (left) of Okta Film received the E7,000 ARTE International Prize for the project Happy Time Will Come Soon (directed by Alessandro Comodin) and Adis Djapo of SCCA/pro.ba picked up the E30,000 Eurimages Co-production Development Award for Tabija (directed by Igor Drljaca) at the CineMart awards ceremony on Wednesday night.

Opposites attract

The medium is the message

French filmmakers Lola Bessis and Ruben Amar have come to the 43rd IFFR for the European premiere of their first film, Swim Little Fish Swim. They reveal their inspirations and motivations.

Stories are overrated. It would be naive to think that in today’s world what we experience is disconnected from a form of mass culture or, at least, a self-imposed cultural niche. By Irina Trocan

The inspiration for art often comes from reality. Yet the story behind the creation of Swim Little Fish Swim (screening in Bright Future, today at 11:30 in the Schouwburg Grote Zaal) is particularly peculiar. It is a story about a couple who are polar opposites. The husband is a musician who refuses to compromise his artistic integrity, whereas the more pragmatic wife has to bend over backwards to make ends meet for them and their three-year old daughter. When asked what led them to fashion the couple this way, Amar says: “Once, at a concert, we met a really interesting and crazy musician who was actually playing small instruments he had built. Lola and I started to imagine his life.” Lola steps in: “We saw he is unlike any musician and a very interesting guy, but very utopian. We didn’t know anything about him. We saw someone who looked like his wife or his girlfriend and started to imagine, ‘Oh, how would their life together be?’” Two artists making a film with two artists as protagonists must have led to some osmosis. The directors confirm this: “The were exactly how we were. We pictured ourselves in those roles and put a lot of projection into them. We talked a lot about being an artist, so there is some of ourselves in both characters.” Bessis elaborates on the challenges the makers faced making Swim Little Fish Swim with a concept suitable enough to cover many genres: “We had to choose between making something more accessible and commercial to gain visibility and to work with famous actors. At the same time, we wanted to … achieve a fine balance. This was like the child in the movie.” As French artists who had moved to New York, Bessis and Amar present a portrait of the Big Apple rarely seen on screen. Amar explains their intention: “I

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foto: Nichon Glerum

By Laya Maheshwari

think we tried to stay very honest and very close to what we felt as French people in New York. We felt the same when we arrived. We were there for one year before we decided to shoot this movie.” Bessis adds: “We have always been fascinated by New York. We started filming everything with an iPhone, like a diary. At one point, we felt we knew that we were going back to France, but wanted to capture something here and tried to put all that in the movie.” The film has already had its American premiere at SxSW in March 2013, but the filmmakers reserved the European premiere for Rotterdam. “I think Rotterdam’s very prestigious and big on offers. It is known as a festival to discover filmmakers and new types of storytelling, so we are proud of this honour”, they conclude.

Three films from this year’s IFFR programme – Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy and Tres D, in the Bright Future section, and Silence Radio, in My Own Private Europe – could easily pass as ‘slice of life’ films – were it not for their obvious connection to a medium. Still screening today and tomorrow, Mary Is Happy, Mary Is Happy by Taiwanese boy wonder Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit is structured around a series of tweets from a (non-famous) teen girl’s Twitter account. It does have what you would conventionally call dramatic structure, centring on the friendship between two teens discovering the pains of love, loss, and perhaps most agonizingly, being co-opted for work by the school principal. The events depicted in the film are extremely random, though – corresponding to the randomness of the tweeted pensées – stabbings or cell phone explosions throw us out of the narrative, until we realise they’re just imaginary; but then, it turns out that not all the violent events in the film are. Tres D by Rosendo Ruiz (screening this morning) takes place in a provincial Argentinian festival which allows for reflections on the purpose of making films and the beauty of the real. Mostly fictive, but contain-

And the winners are…

Ruben Amar and Lola Bessis

At tonight’s awards ceremony, the winners will be announced in six of the competitions running at IFFR 2014. In addition to the three winners of the Hivos Tiger Awards Competition, the winners will be announced of the Big Screen Award, the KNF Award, the MovieZone Award, the NETPAC Award and the FIRPESCI Award. 20:00 hrs, de Doelen Arcadis zaal, free admission.

international film festival rotterdam

ing interviews with real filmmakers and curators, it definitively takes the illusion of glamour and shatters the preconceived notion that film-related events primarily centre around films. Somewhere between a Hong Sang-Soo deadpan comedy (though people in Tres D tend to smile more) and Miguel Gomes’s hybrid Aquele Querido Mês de Agosto/Our Beloved Month of August (2008), this is ultimately a very humane film that will leave you rooting for the characters and their film projects. For those of us who grew up with Richard Curtis’s 2009 Pirate Radio (better known as The Boat that Rocked), Valéry Rosier’s Silence Radio (screening tomorrow) triggers the inevitable title association – and a comparison that surprisingly holds true. It should seem crude to compare the rock-crazed kids from the former films to the elderly radio listeners in a small French village in the second, but think about it for a second – it’s still about intense emotions, providing a soundtrack for life events, and creating a sense of community. Employing largely the means of a documentary film, the director’s staging varies from sympathetic (showing the villagers with little manipulative interference and a good dose of tender patience) to slightly (but only slightly) derisive, as in a sequence in which a woman announces on the phone that she will have a busy evening, after which there’s a cut to her at home, absentmindedly eating some soup. It long since stopped being about excitement. Putting life through a filter is all the rage.

UPC Audience Award As of Thursday 14:03 hours 1. Nebraska............................................................4.74 2. Starred Up..........................................................4.63 3. After the Tone....................................................4.61 4. Feel My Love......................................................4.58 5. Zombie: The Resurrection of Tim Zom.........4.58


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