Daily Tiger UK #9

Page 1

41ST INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ROTTERDAM #9 FRIDAY 3 FEBRUARY 2012

Fast, fun filmmaking: Since setting up shop on January 25, Michel Gondry’s Home Movie Factory (part of Signal’s strand For Real; see page 7) has been churning out four miniature movies a day. Each of the couple of dozen titles produced so far – including It’s Cold and Not a Sensible Thing in Sight, Bloody Screwdriver II and The Unknown Tiger – was made by an ad hoc collective of ten people, using ready-made sets and props, and took barely three hours from pitch to premiere. Among yesterday’s participants were Bridget, an artist with no experience in film

(“it was two and a half hours of fun!”); Astrid (“I made a resolution that I would make a film by February and, being a Buddhist, I chanted for it, so it’s no coincidence”); and Kiemlan, who directed a film for last year’s IFFR and wanted to try operating the camera. “To actually enjoy making movies, that’s what was important for me,” she says: “Pure, unadulterated fun!” (BW) photo: Corinne de Korver

Bringing the revolution home Yesterday, IFFR’s Power Cut: Middle East strand gave a chance to filmmakers and others from the Arab world to air their views on the changes taking place in the region, Ben Walters reports

Many of the effects of the popular uprisings that have spread throughout the Arab world over the past year are striking and unmissable: from the fall of Mubarak to the deaths of dozens of Egyptian football fans this week. But other effects are less obvious. “After 40 years of blockade and confinement, people have overcome this fear,” suggests Charlotte Bank, “and are discovering themselves, rediscovering their friends, developing new relationships. There is an awareness of public space as a space for discourse. That didn’t happen before.” Bank, co-curator of the Visual Arts Festival Damascus, was one of several contributors to a group interview with fi lmmakers and other figures from the Arab world participating in the IFFR’s Power Cut Middle East: Busy Making Revolution strand. Some of the participants spoke under condition of anonymity. A Syrian fi lmmaker spoke of the power of seeing an installation piece at Rotterdam which allowed them to hear for the first time the voice of an activist they had previously seen only as a photograph on walls.

Public space

“When you moved in public in Syria, you controlled yourself and tried not to be noticed,” Bank said. “Now, public space is being seen as a location for the articulation of ideas. It’s being done in an anonymous way: masses of protestors operate in the streets and there are several collectives using interesting new creative – even artistic – forms of protest. There has always been a political element in much artistic production in Syria, because it’s a way to articulate ideas it was not possible to speak about in any other way (but that could be addressed) through multilayered expressions, through the use of metaphors. But this artistic production could only be found in very specific locations. Now, you fi nd creativity in the public space. “The fountains of Damascus have been coloured red to commemorate martyrs on several occasions; this is done by an anonymous group of creative activists or artists. There are several instances of the use of a very well-known revolutionary song whose writer was killed in a very brutal way. This song is being played in different spaces around the city – in garbage bins or from buildings. There have been people driving around in cars distributing leaflets with revolutionary poems; balloon protests; so many different ways. It’s no longer a location that

is controlled, supervised and under the very heavy control of the state. It is the people now who are retaking their city.” Organized crime

There were mixed feelings from Egyptian residents about the country’s position a year after protestors massed at Tahrir Square. To artist and fi lmmaker Khaled Hafez, the deaths of more than 70 people following a football match on Wednesday was “an organized crime. Every three or four months there is a public gathering of some sort and something like that happens. Certain forces are improving their techniques – it’s the first time yesterday that 70 people are dead without a single bullet. To me, the Military Council is a name – the whole thing is much bigger than that.” Ripple effect

Hafez, 48, said that “it’s only the younger generation, who instigated this revolution, who are very much politically engaged. I was not trained or programmed that change would happen in my lifetime, certainly not by public protesting.” But Philip Rizk, born in Germany but raised in Egypt, where he still lives, disagreed. “You had people from across generations and across classes – there were men and women aged 40,

50, 60 on the streets.” For him, the past year has seen an expansion of political consciousness, illustrated by the focus of last month’s protests compared to those of a year earlier. “This time, protestors were very clearly targeting the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, whereas last year one of the weaknesses was that they were focused on one person (Mubarak). As far as the system goes, nothing has changed and things have gotten worse.” The generational issue is clearly of widespread interest. “Something beautiful that I’ve noticed during the toppling of these dictators is the change in my mum,” said one young fi lmmaker of Iraqi descent based in Europe. “She’s in London, away from all of this, 62 years old. From the start to now she’s followed every single moment and, although she’s so sad and she cries, and so many people are dying, she sees something that she never imagined she would see … This idea that we now are free – we can go to the bread shop and talk about the government and say how bad they are – it’s a new idea [and] people might not really know in which direction it’s going.” The effects of actions on the streets of Cairo, Lebanon and Damascus create ripples that travel more widely than might first be apparent, with consequences no one can yet understand. “There’s a revolution happening all over the world, in people’s houses.”


Design in Boijmans Rotterdam designprijs 2011 t/m 12 februari 2012

Nieuwe energie in design en kunst t/m 26 februari 2012 Interventie #18

Sheila Hicks - Cent Minimes t/m 4 maart 2012

T/m 12 februari zijn de genomineerden voor de prestigieuze Rotterdam designprijs 2011 te zien, en een presentatie van het werk van kunstenaar Sheila Hicks. Later dit jaar presenteert het museum een nieuwe collectie opstelling vormgeving en actueel design.

www.boijmans.nl

Dunne & Raby, Technological Dreams Series: No. 1, Robots, 2007, foto: Per Tingleff

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen is hét museum in Nederland waar nationaal en internationaal ontwerptalent een podium krijgt. Binnen het programma ‘Design in Boijmans’ worden tentoonstellingen georganiseerd waarin o.a. designvoorstellen voor een duurzame samenleving centraal staan.


TIME TO IMAGINE Huub Roelvink, managing director of new Dutch distribution outfit Imagine Film Distribution Netherlands, speaks after the company’s launch on January 31. Imagine (Netherlands) is the sister operation of the Belgian concern Imagine Film Distribution, run for the past ten years by Christian Thomas. Roelvink confirms that he and Thomas will together buy Benelux rights for 10-12 films a year. First release for the Dutch entity is the Spectrum title Monsieur Lazhar. “One needs to be present in both Belgium and the Netherlands with the same company ,” he stresses. “Christian has been closely co-operating with Wild Bunch Netherlands for the last few years, I believe, but that was a little like two companies with different DNA trying to work together. Before that, he worked quite closely with Contact Film but that was always on a film-by-film basis. It’s too difficult to have loose partnerships. In acquisition, you have to think about the two markets, which are of equal importance. The whole point of the new operation is to harmonise it as much as possible. There may be some exceptions – for example, if we pick up a Dutch film that is not suitable for the Belgian market – but in general we will really focus on those 10-12 releases and really do them together.” Roelvink helped establish specialist doc distribution house Cinema Delicatessen before running the LUX arthouse complex in Nijmegen. He recently returned to Amsterdam to programme for a range of cinemas in Amsterdam and Amstelveen, a practice he intends to continue as he runs the Dutch Imagine. “Together with Christian, we will try to do good quality arthouse that will also reach an audience. The team in Belgium are very dedicated film-lovers and so are we, so that’s a good starting point, he concludes.” (NC)

GOING IT ALONE Kuala Lumpur-based production outfit Apparat is planning an ambitious 40-screen release in Malaysia for Dain Iskandar Said’s action movie Bunohan (a European premiere in IFFR’s Spectrum). Here in Rotterdam, producer Nandita Solomon confirms that the film will be released through local producer Megaserv in early March. “We are spearheading our whole marketing and promotion on our own,” Solomon says. The martial arts action-thriller, which premiered in Toronto, is sold internationally by EasternLight (the Asian arm of Gary Hamilton’s Arclight Films). Bunohan has already been acquired by Universal Pictures for DVD and VOD distribution in Britain, France, Germany, New Zealand and Australia. Bunohan was largely funded through a loan from the National Film Development Corporation (FINAS). The Malaysian Government recently set up a $70 million fund to boost Malaysia’s creative industries. The film’s international success is being hailed back home in Malaysia. “Right now, the bank is very proud of us. Originally, the Malaysian Government said that the fund was to try to get Malaysian films out there.” Bunohan is the first feature by Apparat, set up in 2009. During IFFR, Dain Iskandar Said has also revealed details of his next projects. One film is Orchid, a futuristic neo-noir set in Southeast Asia. The film will explore the plight of poor immigrants, living on the margins of big cities. Apparat’s next film is likely to be a thriller about a European ethnographer travelling through Asia. The working title is Bangkok Interchange. The company will be working on both with co-producer, Tim Kwok, a Malaysian based in the US who runs LA-based outfit Convergence Entertainment. (GM)

British fi lm Weekend by Andrew Haigh, screening in IFFR’s Bright Future section, has won the IFFR’s MovieSquad Award, consisting of a chance to be programmed in one of the fi lm educational programmes of EYE Film Institute Netherlands, such as MovieZone. The young people’s jury announced the winning fi lm at the MovieSquad Award Ceremony yesterday in Pathé 4. Weekend will be released in the Netherlands in May 2012 by ABC-Cinemien.

Eye-opener Making Alms for the Blind Horse has been a revealing process for first-time director Gurvinder Singh, he tells Nick Cunningham

Gurvinder Singh’s film debut, Alms for the Blind Horse, with a budget south of 500,000 dollars and a cast made up of local Punjabi villagers, not only picked up selections at a slew of major international events in 2011 (including Venice Orizzonti) but also the Special Jury Award at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival. The film, which tells of a repressed family in a Punjabi village who join a protest against the demolition of a house, is selected for IFFR Bright Future 2012. “When I was casting actors in the cities, and in the Punjab, none of them seemed believable in the role of a villager,” Singh explains. “Nor did they look convincing. I wanted to make a very studied, balladic, gentle kind of film. For me, the expressionist quality that an actor can bring was not required. I was interested in the image, the light and the sound – less dialogue, but more information coming through silences and through faces.” The filmmaker read Gurdial Singh’s novel of the same name ten years ago while at the Film and Television Institute of India. After graduating, he recorded life (and folk songs) in the Punjab in a series of documentaries. “There is a huge underbelly of the sub-castes and there is still a lot of exploitation,” he points out. “This is the reality that neither the films from the Punjab nor the general media talk of.” Three years ago, he wrote the script for Alms for the Blind Horse. When he came to shoot the film in January/February 2011, his choices were informed less by audience taste, and more by an aesthetic developed while studying international cinema and its myriad possibilities. “You’re making the film from your own understanding of cinema ... and sometimes you feel

Gurvinder Singh

you’re working for the medium and not for anybody else. You want to take the medium forward,” he expresses. The roller-coaster past year has been a real eye-opener, and has prepared him, he claims, for future forays into the international marketplace. “It has been a great experience making the first film and then going to all these festivals and seeing how other films are promoted, the whole business of cinema,” Singh comments. “When I come to make my next film, I’m aware of this whole rigmarole. You know where a film can go, and what the possibilities are for it. And I also feel that, without compromising my aesthetics or sensibilities, or what I want to achieve, I can fine-tune my filmmaking

photo: Corinne de Korver

after this experience of seeing films from other parts.” Singh’s next film will again be located in the Punjab, this time set in the 1980s, during the time of severe social unrest that culminated in the storming of the Golden Temple in Amritsar. “Normal life became very difficult. You couldn’t travel by bus. The Hindus were targeted by the Sikh militants. You couldn’t step out in the dark,” he comments. “It will talk of the problems of the common man, how he was caught between the militants on the one hand and the military on the other.” Alms for the Blind Horse – Gurvinder Singh

Fri 03 Feb 10:15 PA3 Sat 04 Feb 09:30 CI5

TOPKAPI SLATES UP Topkapi Films, the outfit set up late last year by leading Dutch producers Frans van Gestel and Arnold Helsenfeld, has revealed further details of its initial slate. The Amsterdam-based company is developing new films with many of the cream of Dutch filmmakers, among them Urszula Antoniak’s CineMart entry Nude Area (due to shoot in the summer); a new project from Jean van de Velde (currently at a very early stage) and The Family Way by Joram Lurzen, a follow up to Dutch box-office hit All Is Love (which posted 1.4 million admissions in the Netherlands). This is due to shoot in the spring. One film due to finish this week is My Life On Planet B, directed by Iván López Núñez. Meanwhile, the company is busy financing historical epic Public Works, an adaptation of the novel by Thomas Rosenboom about two brothers striving

for success in nineteenth-century Amsterdam. This will be directed by Theu Boermans from a screenplay by Frank Ketelaar. Alongside its Dutch movies, Topkapi has boarded various international projects as coproducer, among them Carlos Reygadas’s Tenebras Lux and Flemish director Felix Von Groeningen’s The Broken Circle Breakdown and Patrice Toye’s Black Spiders. Topkapi is also expected shortly to announce details of a new coproduction with Danish powerhouse Zentropa. “The balance in my new company is a bit more commercial than at Motel Films or IDTV,” Van Gestel comments of the difference between Topkapi and the two previous companies where he has worked. “We always will produce strong arthouse films because I like to work with some directors and I like those films, but the market is asking for films that come a bit closer to the audience.”

Van Gestel predicted that budgets for Dutch films will come down significantly in 2013 as the economic crisis and the public funding cuts continue to bite. “We need diversity. We do arthouse films. We have a few very big commercial titles and we are looking now also for films that are crossover arthouse,” the Topkapi boss says. From his IDTV days, Van Gestel has retained a strong bond with Dutch distributor A-Film and Wild Bunch Benelux. However, Van Gestel says Topkapi is not looking for exclusive relationships with particular distributors. “Because we do different types of films, we need different types of distributors. I cannot imagine myself working with the same distributor all the time. I will see per film what is the best one. There is a lot of competition in the Netherlands. I think there are too many distributors – but in a way, I think that is good for us!”(GM)

Angling for survival Former Sundance winner Leonard Retel Helmrich is to make a new feature documentary set in the world of Dutch herring fishing. Geoffrey Macnab reports

Hollandse Nieuwe, as the project is called, is being produced through In-Soo Productions. It explores the plight of the Dutch herring industry as it enters what seems to be its dying throes. Only two vessels – Wiron 5 and Wiron 6 – of the shipping company Jaczon from Scheveningen are currently fishing for herring under the Dutch flag. Helmrich has already shot on board the fishing boats for eight days. The film is billed as “a story told from the inside point of view of the Dutch herring fishers, in which the romance, comradeship and herring is celebrated and where slowly one of the last ‘Dutch Glories’ is fading away.” The project is currently in development as part of the Teledoc-project. This is a collaboration between the Dutch Public Broadcasters, CoBO Fund and the Dutch Film Fund. A Teledoc is a feature-length, non-fiction film with a contemporary Dutch subject aimed at a wide audience, programmed on prime-time Dutch television. It has just been confirmed that the director’s sister, Hetty Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich, the boss of Scarabee Films, will co-direct the project.

Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich produced Helmrich’s Position Among the Stars, a prize winner at IDFA which went on to win the Sundance Special Grand Jury Award. The brother and sister team of Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich and Helmrich are also due to work on feature doc The Colour Of Survival. Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich will direct the film and Helmrich will be one of the

Hetty Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich

cinematographers. The Colour Of Survival, produced by Rotterdam-based Holland Harbour, aims to shine a light on a little known aspect of Indonesian history, namely the plight of Dutch Indonesians trying to survive during World War II, when they were victimized both by the Japanese occupiers and by Indonesian nationalists.

photo: Ruud Jonkers

3


THE BRIDGE DE NIEUWSTE SCANDINAVISCHE MISDAADSERIE

IEF S U L EXC kel

bwin e w e bij d e van d nt a r k s k Vol

5 DVD’S

€ 29,95

Wanneer een lijk wordt gevonden op de Øresundbrug tussen Zweden en Denemarken, worden de Zweedse en Deense politie tot een nauwe samenwerking gedwongen. Schokkende gebeurtenissen blijven elkaar opvolgen. En dit is nog maar het begin…

GA NAAR VK.NL/WEBWINKEL

vk.nl/events

056-VK-IFFR-thebridge-272X390+5MM.indd 1

1/12/2012 3:43:31 PM


Educating Kaspar Getting The Legend of Kaspar Hauser made was a struggle, director Davide Manuli tells The Celluloid Liberation Front

“It’s such a struggle to self-produce your own fi lm”, sighs Manuli. “If you don’t have support, it’s really hard. You’ve got no idea; cinema is a rigid and harsh structure that doesn’t allow intrusion into its ranks.” Far from being dispirited, the director of The Legend of Kaspar Hauser finds time to laugh at his own hardships, turning production austerity into a poetic asset. A re-imaging of the story of Kaspar Hauser – the youth who appeared in Nuremberg in the early 19th century, claiming to have spent his upbringing in an isolated cell – the fi lm defies easy description. The IFFR calls it a “surreal post-Western shot in beautiful black-and-white”, which is true but doesn’t quite do justice to the dizzying invention of the piece which includes, among other things, 1950s-style space ships and a charismatic turn by Vincent Gallo. After three years struggling to get it made, Manuli finally managed to bring his Kaspar Hauser to Rotterdam. “What interests me in the story of Kaspar Hauser is how and why he became a myth; an archetype, a Christ, an idiot, an enigma”, he enthuses. “This fi lm is a Western up to a point. We worked on the original script with Vincent Gallo,” he explains. “There are a lot of different elements that clash with the Western genre, for example the (electronic) music”.

Unlike the true-life Kaspar Hauser, who was introduced to ‘civilisation’ by concerned citizens, Manuli’s is more or less neglected by his post-futuristic society: it teaches him nothing, because it has nothing to teach. “Absolutely, in real life Kasper Hauser was subjected to a very coercive ‘education’; they taught him piano, they dressed him up, taught him how to read and write, ride a horse and all that,” Manuli points out. “While in my fi lm it’s quite the opposite; the sheriff welcomes Kasper but doesn’t teach him anything!” Speaking about his decision to cast the actress Silvia Calderoni as Kaspar, Manuli explains: “I would have liked to work with a Russian contortionist in the role of Kasper, but it didn’t work out. Then I remembered Silvia Calderoni, who I had seen acting years ago in a play called Paesaggio con Fratello Rotto. Her androgyny introduced the esoteric element I was looking for to my fi lm.” Despite its scorching surrealism, there is a serious point behind the fi lm, Manuli says: “In the West, there is no time to get to know each other; to communicate, to welcome, help, exchange. What did Kasper Hauser learn in the two or three years granted to him by the bourgeoisie of Nuremberg? Nothing! Are we sure that he is the idiot and we are the intelligent ones?” The Legend of Kaspar Hauser – Davide Manuli

Fri 03 Feb 22:15 PA3

The Legend of Kaspar Hauser

Corta

First cut Director Felipe Guerrero found the rhythm for his debut film, Corta , through shooting sugar-cane cutters on Super 8, he tells Ben Walters

Felipe Guerrero’s Corta, which gets its world premiere in this year’s Bright Future strand, records the process of sugar-cane cultivation in south-west Colombia, from harvest to haulage to razing. The simplicity of the subject is matched by the fi lm’s form: it comprises seven locked-off long shots of a field, each of them taking up a full 11-minute roll of 16mm fi lm, the rhythms of the labourers offset by the cumulative rhythms of Iannis Xenakis’s marimba score. Guerrero made his Rotterdam bow in 2007 with the short Paraíso, another experiment in documentary form. For his feature debut, he turned to a subject close to home. “I was interested in doing a piece on the working world,” he says through a translator, “and I come from a region in Colombia where sugar-cane plantations are concentrated, so I started doing some research into how the cutters lived and worked. In a plantation, you can see an idea of the whole of Colombia: the diversity of characters and socio-economic backgrounds, displaced people, former guerillas, people who process coca leaves in coke labs.”

Much of Guerrero’s research was shot, like Paraíso, on Super 8. “When I changed the Super 8 cartridges during fi lming, I felt that was also a rhythmic work, like that of the cutters. I imagined action fi lming, like action painting, where the creative process is the work itself. From there, I started working on how to portray the way in which the cutters move in space. That’s where the idea of the fi xed frame comes from – to work with the way they advance in the depth of field.” The strict simplicity of this visual approach left room to develop the sound design. “I developed the idea of the image being a music score over which I was able to work the sound. Since the fi lm is edited in the camera, the sound editing was ultimately the fi lm’s greatest creative work.” Guerrero has also been at CineMart as part of Rotterdam Lab with a new project dealing with internal displacement in Colombia. “Obviously, it won’t have a traditional construction,” he says. “It’ll be built like a kaleidoscope, with stories of three characters that fall apart and come together and mix up during a journey from the forest to the city.” Corta – Felipe Guerrero Fri 03 Feb 22:15 LV3

On the road

Dangerous games

Matt McCormick’s film The Great Northwest is an affectionate record of a bygone America. By Edward Lawrenson

The Ultimate Pranx Case is a found-footage film campaigning against bullying, producer Claude Grégoire tries to convince Mark Baker

The inspiration behind The Great Northwest occurred when director Matt McCormick was spending some time browsing in a junk shop. Among the shop’s various bits of merchandise was the scrap book of a road trip through the North West of America made by four women friends in the late 1950s. Full of postcards, photos, menus, even a napkin alongside the multi-state itinerary the “ladies” – as McCormick affectionately calls them – the scrapbook was a collection of faded relics of the trip. Armed with the book and his camera, McCormick got in his car and retraced their journey. The result is a beguiling mix of travelogue, roadmovie and documentary. Combing the material he shot during his own trip with the souvenirs the ladies

Matt McCormick

photo: Rogier Maaskant

collected more than 50 years ago, the movie is in part a gently melancholic portrait of a culture that has long disappeared. “It is easy to find a sense of nostalgia in these images,” he says of the ephemera that the ladies collected for their scrapbook, “but they do represent a time that seems to be quickly fading.” As he makes his journey, McCormick realises that some of the local attractions the ladies visited have long since gone: “The unique, individual road-side Americana of the 1950s is being replaced with corporate mass-production at an alarming rate.” There is a certain poignancy, too, in the scrapbook itself, a lovingly crafted, handmade artefact quite unlike the instant digital photos that now tend to record our holidays. “Everything is so disposable these days,” says McCormick. “The photos we take don’t even get printed out and only exist digitally on computer screens. Half of them are probably deleted before the vacation is even over.” The sheer ubiquity and ease of digital photography also means, says McCormick, “many tourists spend more time looking at the digital display of their cameras than they spend looking at the actual subject they are photographing.” The point is made with wit during his fi lm when McCormick trains his camera on a line of tourists expectantly waiting for the eruption of the Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone Park. When it finally happens, most of the audience experience this impressive natural phenomenon through the tiny screen of their compact cameras or phones. Taking over a year to edit the fi lm – “the first several months were dedicated to simply figuring out the structure, while the second half was spent fine-tuning the edit, mixing the sound, and adjusting the colour” – McCormick says that the IFFR premiere of his fi lm was “absolutely fantastic”. And did he ever find out anything more about the “ladies” than the artful scraps they left behind? “No, but I maintain hope that someday someone might see the fi lm and have some information about them.” The Great Northwest – Matt McCormick

Fri 03 Feb 18:15 PA6

Audience responses to The Ultimate Pranx Case, a world premiere in Bright Future by Montreal-based writers/ producers Slyvain Guy and Claude Grégoire, have been mixed – not to say polarized – Grégoire says, after three screenings at the IFFR. “Someone wrote a response (on the IFFR website) advising people to burn their tickets – but we have achieved a reasonable score in the audience award poll so far, so some people must have really appreciated it.” The Ultimate Pranx Case is the story of a practical joke gone – very seriously – wrong, presented as a campaigning film against bullying. The makers claim it is a true story, and that the footage in the film was taken by the pranksters themselves (and much of it streamed by them live on the internet, in 2010). The victim of the prank (Dinah Murphy) ended up dead, and the pranksters in hospital – and then in court. How did the makers come across the case? Speaking ahead of the film’s last screening tonight, Claude Grégoire explains: “The story could be that... We came into contact (with Dinah Murphy’s parents) through a mutual acquaintance. They got permission to use the footage, which was released by the police after the trial. They also got permission from the other parents involved to use the material, to make a film that would address the issue of bullying.” Guy and Grégoire then went to work on the raw footage. “When we saw this material, we realised there is a lot more to it than meets the eye”, he continues. “It’s not just that we (the audience) are watching what’s going on. There’s someone else also watching what’s happening. There’s a movie inside the movie, which is very interesting. And then there’s the fact that everyone – except for the girl – is aware they are being shot. This is a very current cinematic device – I just went to see a movie here called Un nuage dans un verre d’eau (A Cloud in a Glass of Water), which does the same thing. It’s a device that was also used a lot in the Nouvelle

Vague – making people aware they are watching a movie.” “What fascinated us about the prank material was, it is like a scripted story. As the film critic Hassouna Mansouri wrote (in de Filmkrant, see http://www. filmkrant.nl, MB), we have taken real material, and it’s almost like we are trying to make it fake. Which is the reverse of what normally happens – for example with The Blair Witch Project – which takes something made up and pretends it’s real.” Technically, was quite a challenge to mould the raw footage into something screenable, Grégoire says. “We had to recopy everything. They had recorded the sound separately; but out of sync with the images, so we had to re-sync it all. The post-production was really heavy. Fortunately, it was all recorded in full HD, except for the webcam, which we had to work on quite a bit.” “At one point, we did decide to shorten it”, he continues. “During the meal, there was a period when nothing much was happening, so we cut it. Because of this, there is some discontinuity, for example with the glass of wine, which some people have picked up on. We had to fight for this – Dinah Murphy’s parents initially wanted everything to be left completely how it happened – but finally they realised it was necessary for the film.” Did Mr and Mrs Murphy not want to attend the premiere of in Rotterdam? “No,” Grégoire says. “They are from Pennsylvania. To them, Europe is a dangerous place.” In terms of new projects, Guy is currently writing a script on nineteenth-century Canadian ‘strongest man who ever lived’ Louis Cyr, and Grégoire is working on a new feature project, provisionally titled Les Mondes Étranges, dealing with the problems of money and how “money shouldn’t be a problem – it shouldn’t be part of our lives.” Asked whether this will be a fiction film, Grégoire replies enigmatically, “Yes, it is fiction – but then again, what is fiction?” The Ultimate Pranx Case – Slyvain Guy and

Claude Grégoire Fri 03 Feb 22:30 PA4

5


International Film Festival Rotterdam 2012 would like to thank:

Hoofdsponsors

Subsidiënten

Partners

Stadsontwikkeling

Stichting Democratie en Media • Embassy of Brazil • Stichting van Leeuwen van Lignac • Japan Foundation • Maison Descartes • De Nationale Kunst Loterij • Goethe-Instititut • Embassy of Austria • De Unie

Suppliers AMPCO FLASHLIGHT Grolsch • BeamSystems • De Doelen • Rotterdamse Schouwburg • LantarenVenster • Cinerama Filmtheater • Oude Luxor Theater • Gofilex • De Jong Tours • Argos Oil

Hubert Bals Fonds stichting

Dioraphte L’Esprit du Temps

CineMart

M U N D U S

ACE • Binger Filmlab • Catalan Films & TV • Centre for the Moving Image • Cinéfondation Résidence du Festival • CineLink • Cinergia • CPH:DOX • Creative Scotland • Doha Film Institute • Durban FilmMart Durban Film Office • EAVE • EYE Film Institute Netherlands • Festival Scope • Film I Vast • Film- und Medienstiftung NRW • Finnish Film Foundation • Flanders Audiovisual Fund • Fundación TyPA • HAF • IFP • Indigenous Branch - Screen Australia • Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin • Irish Film Board • Israel Film Fund • KOFIC • Media Desk Netherlands • Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg • Meetings on the Bridge • NCN Rome • NCP • New Zealand Film Commission • NFDC India • Paris Cinema • Producers Network Cannes • Proimagenes Colombia • Rio de Janeiro State Secretary of Culture • Rotterdam Media Fonds • Skillset • Sundance Institute • Telefilm Canada • Wallonie Bruxelles Images

Tiger Business Lounge 3PO • ABN AMRO Bank N.V. • Argos Oil • Bilderberg Parkhotel Rotterdam • Center for Strategy & Leadership • DHL • Dubois & co Registeraccountants • Dura Vermeer Bouw Rotterdam • Ernst & Young • Freeland Corporate Advisors • Gemeente Rotterdam • Globe Business Travel • Groot Handelsgebouwen NV • HDI-Gerling Verzekeringen NV • Hogeschool Rotterdam • Hogeschool Inholland Rotterdam • Houthoff Buruma • ING Bank Rotterdam • Intermax Managed Hosting • Manhave Vastgoed • Matrans Holding BV • Men At Work TV Produkties • NautaDutilh • Nedspice Holding BV • Organise to Learn • PriceWaterhouseCoopers • Rotterdam Media Fonds • Smit Internationale • Syntrus Achmea • Veenman+ • Vestia Groep

Campagnebeeld 2012 Concept en ontwerp: 75B Festivaltrailer Concept en ontwerp: IN10, CCCP • Distributie: Jean Mineur, Gofilex

Distributeurs ABC - Cinemien • A-Film Distribution • Benelux Film Distributors • Cinéart Netherlands • Cinema Delicatessen • EYE Film Institute Netherlands • Filmfreak Distribution • IDTV Film • Imagine Nederland • Just Film Distribution • Lumière • Nederlands Instituut voor Mediakunst - NIMk • O’Brother Distribution • Sony Pictures Releasing Netherlands • Universal Pictures Benelux • Warner Bros. Pictures Holland • Wild Bunch Benelux

COLOFON DAILY TIGER NL: Anton Damen (hoofdredactie), Else de Jonge (eindredactie),

Programma informatie: Chris Schouten, Melissa van der Schoor Coördinatie A-Z: Saskia Gravelijn, Lot Piscaer, Robert-Jan Schiphorst,

Joost Broeren, Paul van de Graaf, Elsbeth Jongsma, Sietse Meijer, Kim van der Meulen, Maricke Nieuwdorp (redactie), Lotte Kroese, Niki van der Ende, Fabian Schellevis (web), Afke Duinkerken (marketing en communicatie) UK: Edward Lawrenson (editor-in-chief ), Nick Cunningham, Geoffrey MacNab, Mark Baker, Ben Walters (web)

Anne Lynn Cleuren Fotografie: Felix Kalkman, Bram Belloni, Corinne de Korver, Ruud Jonkers, Lucia Guglielmetti, Rogier Maaskant, Nichon Glerum Met medewerking van:

Vormgeving: Sjoukje van Gool, Laurenz van Galen, Gerald Zevenboom, g7b.nl Drukker: Veenman+ Acquisitie: Daily Productions Oplage: 10.000 ex

Anne Lynn Cleuren

23


Out of the Box The IFFR’s For Real programme explores fundamental questions prompted by technological advances. By Edward Lawrenson

“Technologies are changing – digitization is doing a lot to our viewing habits – how do we as a festival respond to that?” The question is raised by IFFR programmer Edwin Carels, speaking in his office on Wednesday – and it’s one that is at the heart of For Real, a major strand of events and installations playing in Signals. Changing perception

One of the original ideas behind For Real came from fellow programmer Inge de Leeuw, who wanted create a strand that explored if and how new digital devices like tablet computers are changing the way we perceived reality. “The iPad was one of things that occasioned our thinking about this strand. More so than ever, people are in front of all kinds of screens in their daily lives, so we’re constantly mediating our experience and communicating via our machines. So what is cinematic about this; what is it from the tradition of cinema that is seeping into these new formats? Is it really altering our modes of handling audio-visual information and entertainment?” Blurring of boundaries

Digital technology certainly figures in For Real events. Our Broken Voice, an interactive experience created by artists’ collective Circumstance, provides individual participants with a set of instructions and prompts to be played through headphones on their MP3 players, and sends them out into a Rotterdam location. “It’s the opposite of a flash mob,” says Carrels. “It’s a subtle mob, where you are not supposed to be seen. You just immerse yourself in a big city environment: it’s very close to the experience of a short film. I did it in Ghent and there were some beautiful occurrences – complete happenstance, but everything becomes poetic, that complete blurring of boundaries between your filmic experience and your real-life experience.” There is a similar blurring to be enacted in Wouter Huis’ Performance #1 presentation in a garage, in which a live big-screen relay of a street view is shown, where the view of the actual street would be. This substitution

Edwin Carels in the Reality Check on the Schouwburgplein

of a high-definition digital representation for the real thing means, says Carrels, “you start to interpret the world outside as if it were a film scene.” Through the window

But the strand’s preoccupations aren’t just about our relationship to new technologies. More widely, the project explores the degree to which our exposure to screen culture determines and shapes the way we look at things. “Can we ever leave the frame behind?” Carrels asks. One of the most prominent responses to this is provided by Eye Trap – described by Carrels as a “a big cinematic experience, but without film.” “We have a big-scale performance by the Rotterdam Metropole orchestra,” he says. “They’re going to score a film, like

photo: Bram Belloni

they do with silent films. But the ‘film’ is now a window, looking out at the harbour, and we’ve invited Dutch artist Germain Kruip, who’s famous for really subtle installations working with ambient light and architecture, to do something with that window – and the orchestra doesn’t know what’s going to happen. I don’t know either. We’re all going to be watching through the window and we won’t know what’s real and what’s not. The whole thing – because of the setting and the score – will be a filmic experience.”

fortieth anniversary – it was a good test of stretching what is festival territory, what are the places where you want to experience film. But these were still institutions – museums and galleries – that we collaborated with. Pushing that further, we ended up in reality itself: not in a formatted, institutional way, but leaving the cinemas behind and stepping into a reality where you’re not sure what kind of layer or script has been imposed.” “We take our programming out of the box and away from the screens,” he adds.

Stretching the territory

Eye Trap – Germaine Kruip Fri 3 17:00 Cruise Terminal

Also including Michel Gondry’s Home Movie Factory (see front page), the strand develops some of the ideas Carrels put into place for 2011 XL project: “Last year, I programmed events at 40 locations to celebrate our

Performance #1 – Wouter Huis

Fri 3 16:00 & 20:00 Theater De Gouvernestraat

7


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.