Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Of Gods and Men

Our commitment to a place, a people, or a person is tested when something we cherish (our own well-being, for example) is endangered. At these times choice is not a freedom but a burden. Too often this burden is dispensed with, swiftly and efficiently, because the choice for self-preservation (physical, emotional or financial) can be justified, easily explained as being in others' interest, not just our own. The burden: honestly evaluating the alternatives, succumbing neither to mindless self-sacrifice or rationalized retreat. It's a tough test, most recently felt by some in Tokyo and the Kanto region of Japan. None of us should presume to judge others in this regard.
Few films explore this realm with honesty, and it is difficult for directors, writers and actors to avoid sentimentality and melodrama in telling such a story. That is why "Of Gods and Men" must be seen. In a narrative based on a true story, eight Cistercian monks struggle, individually and as a community, with this choice when their north African monastery is caught between a government they believe corrupt, and a mounting tide of murderous religious fundamentalism. One can easily postulate reasons for leaving this situation, but one must see the film to understand the case for remaining.
Christian religious men, their lives are fully integrated with the Muslim community they serve and that has come to depend on them. At one point, when the burden weighs heavily on them, and they are not ready to accept the possible consequences of remaining (their own kidnapping or death not the least), one of the monks tells the village elder that they, the monks, are nothing more than "birds on a branch." The elder's wife, standing in the doorway listening to this conversation, corrects him: "You are the branch and we are the birds."
Understandable fear, along with sincere reflection on the reality of religious vocation, and concern for the villagers all move the monks emotionally as the violence moves closer. We are given a model of leadership in the character of Christian, and we are allowed to observe the dignity of middle-aged and elderly men grappling with the everyday vicissitudes of aging in the midst of larger turmoil. The film is perfectly paced, allowing us time to process the dilemmas faced by these men. Near the film's conclusion, we are allowed a wonderful sequence of closeups as they share a glass of wine and listen to a tape of Swan Lake. Hope you see this movie, there is a reason it won the Cannes Grand Prix. It's at the Landmark Century in Chicago this week.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Glass House

Thomas Roszak's Northfield, Illinois residence, featured in Friday's Financial Times http://tinyurl.com/26unwpb anchored tonight's Chicago Filmmakers "Architecture in Motion" in a 9 minute short by Media Artist Chi Jang Yin. Roszak's received the AIA Interiors Award for this modernist, transparent box. Chi Jang Yin's film follows the construction process, from post-and-beam fitting to glazing, ending with the unfolding of the living spaces to the exterior, through seasonal change and the activities of the young family. The filmmaker appeared at the screening, answered questions about the three-year filmmaking process, and brought the audience into contact with the occupants' experience, especially as it related to the house's natural surroundings. You can view the film at www.chijangyin.com, along with her other film and photography projects.
Some of the other "Architecture in Motion" films were in, face it, really really slow motion. I'm pretty sure Inland Steel didn't move during the 2007 12 minute film of the same name, but I think I did see Lamar walking around in his office. The movement in Adele Friedman's Tree Studios is stately, and it is hard to believe the changes since this film was shot 20 years ago.
I can't wait for Chicago Filmmakers "Not too Otaku" series of Japanese anime coming October 22nd, it will include a short by Osamu Tezuka, creator of Astro Boy.