Showing posts with label 1995. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1995. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 August 2012

INSTITUTE BENJAMENTA or THIS DREAM PEOPLE CALL HUMAN LIFE - Review By Greg Klymkiw - 17 years after first seeing the Quay Brothers' film adaptation of Robert Walser's novel "Jakob von Gunten", I'm happy to report that yes, the movie is a masterpiece.

Institute
Benjamenta
or
This Dream
People Call
Human Life


dir. Brothers Quay
(1995)

*****

Starring:
Alice Krige
Mark Rylance
Gottfried John

Review By
Greg Klymkiw


A BEDTIME STORY FROM MAGMA HEAD
Magma Head entered Mieuxberry's boxcar in Loni Beach Forest, a mere pubic hair's north of Gimli and like every evening, he proceeded to silently and gently tuck all the Drones in. Upon completion of his nightly duties, he took his place upon the tree stump in the centre of the boxcar, moved the oil lamp closer to his proximity and removed a slender volume from his pocket. The twinkle in his eye and an ever-so slight pursing of the lips was enough to instil curiosity amongst the Drones as to what manner of tale would be read aloud to complete a most perfect day of worshipping the newly crowned Fjallkona and greedily dining on Hardfiskur, Skyr and Vinatarta.

“Will it be the Huysmans?” The Love Doctor ejaculated.

“Bruno Schulz would do me very nicely,” cooed Little Julie.

“You know what I want,” growled The Claw, “Ruskin's my man.”

“Oh thtuff it, Claw!” Mieuxberry volleyed with the pronounced lisp that consumed his palate whenever Claw haughtily implied that he’d never hear “Ethics of the Dust”, his bedtime words of choice.

“I’m good with whatever,” Squid opined cheerfully.

“Will it be the Huysmans?” The Love Doctor ejaculated once again.

“Thtuff it, L.D. We had the bloody Huythmanth all fucking week becauthe of you.”

“I’d settle for some Bataille,” The Love Doctor offered meekly.

Magma Head chuckled, shaking his elephantine skull to and fro.

“Tonight,” he said, “I have something very new, very special and very appropriate for you lads – especially in light of the magnificence of this year’s Fjallkona. So rest thine weary heads fellows, put aside thine petty squabbles and allow me to purvey the greatest words I have yet to lay my eyes upon.”

“Greater than Hamsun?” Little Julie queried.

"Greater than Calvino?" Squid implored.

"Greater than Ruskin?" growled the Claw.

“Greater than all,” beamed Magma Head and in dulcet tones, he bowed his head over the Holy Book and he did read:

“One learns very little here, there is a shortage of teachers, and none of us boys of the Benjamenta Institute will come to anything, that is to say, we shall all be something very small and subordinate later in life . . .”
In 1995, the identical twin Quay Brothers, Stephen and Timothy, unleashed their stunning feature length adaptation of Robert Walser’s novel “Jakob von Gunten” and a lifelong dream for the ages began. Upon first seeing Institute Benjamenta or This Dream People Call Human Life, I was infused with the same excitement as when I first encountered the novel many years earlier. Being a devoted servant to Mr. Walser, I could think of no other filmmaker better poised to deliver a great film version of his work.

The Twins did not disappoint.

Born and raised in Philadelphia, the identical twins eventually crossed the pond and left America nipping at their heels before they settled in London. With their old college chum Keith Griffiths, they formed Koninck Studios and generated over 20 landmark short films before embarking on this, their first feature.

And WHAT a first feature!

Both works, Walser's novel and the Twins' movie, exist separately from each other in completely different mediums, but as such, are of lasting value - insofar as I believe it is possible for anybody to experience one without the other. Ah, but what joy to know Walser when diving headlong into the Quays’ magnificent motion picture. Then again, what joy it is to know the Quays’ movie, then dive with the same headlong abandon into Walser.

The tale, in both book and film, is much the same. One Jakob von Gunten (Mark Rylance) enters into the study of servitude at the Benjamenta Institute, a school devoted to turning out the very best butlers and servants to ply their trade throughout Europe.

Alas, the Institute has seen better days – at least it surely must have – for when Jakob flings himself into its womb of servile academe, he is perplexed by its dank decrepitude. A former perfume factory (a Quay touch Walser would have no doubt approved), the musk of deer wafts thickly through the dark, cluttered interiors, still adorned with its previous tenant's accoutrements - antlers aplenty, dusty stuffed deer heads and even the leg of a deer, handily utilized used as a pointer in the classroom devoted to servility.

The school's money-grubbing principal Herr Benjamenta (Gottfried John) is an ogre-like cripple who flings himself about with a clanking, clumping pair of canes - bellowing, demanding and veering (when need be) twixt authoritarian, gentle caring and a curious form of lust. The school's chief lecturer is Lisa (Alice Krige), Herr Benjamenta's sister - a rigid dominatrix with a face that swings between the angelic and demonic.

Needless to say, Jakob is quite enamoured with his sexy Frau Teacher.

Eventually, endless days and weeks pass. The students, a motley Seven-Dwarf-like clutch of submissive acolytes to Frau Lisa's demands, engage in rigorous exercises devoted to solely to subservience. Jakob occasionally attempts to subvert this, just to mix things up a bit. He is a sly devil, that one. But as he is drawn deeper into Lisa's formidable spell, Herr Benjamenta draws himself ever closer to Jakob (in a manner very unbecoming of a gentleman).

Death, it seems is just around the corner, for the Institute and its spirit. The very soul of the Institute is ultimately personified in the one person who desperately seeks escape from its darkness. Light is salvation. Alas, it makes only fleeting appearances.

Life in the Institute, such as it is, is not unlike a dream.

Like all dreams, however, it must fade.

Some will fade with it.

Others will move on.

I first saw Institute Benjamenta, or This Dream People Call Human Life at the Locarno Film Festival in the summer of 1995. The experience was one I shall never forget. So emotional was my response to the film that I finally gave way to a physical need to respond to the beauty and brilliance of what the Twins had wrought from Walser.

At a certain point, my elation caused me to emit tears of joy over the film's supreme artistry which astonishingly converged with tears wrought from the profoundly moving sequence towards the film’s end when Lisa, surrounded by the mournful humming of her pupils, fights to stave off the inevitable whilst betraying the deep knowledge that resistance is indeed futile.

This is something that has seldom happened to me while watching a movie – an almost spiritual coming together of being deeply moved by the filmmaking and its sheer genius just at that salient point when the film’s narrative and themes are equally moving. It was at that point I was quite convinced I was watching a film destined for masterpiece status.

Visually, Institute Benjamenta is a feast of epic proportions with both production design and cinematography that have seldom been rivalled in terms of originality and dazzlingly sumptuous beauty.

Another element of perfection is the screenplay that not only captures the spirit and key touchstones of Walser’s book, but does so with grace, humour and emotion. The tone and pace are precisely as I imagined a film version of the book to have, but most delightfully, the Twins and their co-writer Alain Passes retain and gorgeously capture the novel's voice - that being Jakob himself. The Twins are never shy about using the voiceover. It's a perfect compliment to the visuals.

Astoundingly, many of the visuals sans narration evoke (for those who know and love the novel) Walser's distinctive literary voice. Few directors have been blessed with this ability. For my money the only equally successful example of this is John Huston's movie of James Joyce's The Dead. (Granted, others come close, but on this front, my money goes to the seemingly odd bedfellows of the Twins and the late Mr. Huston.)

Another element in the equation that is the perfection of Institute Benjamenta comes in the form of Lech Jankowski's haunting score which works on two levels - one, in perfect tandem with the film and two, as gorgeous, soaring music all on its own.

Add to this:

- a perfect cast (especially the luscious Borg Queen herself, Miss Krige);

- a spirit of cinematic invention that place the Twins in a most lofty pantheon;

- and last, but not least, the simple, unavoidable fact that Institute Benjaments is quite unlike anything you will ever see.

It has been 17 years since I first saw the film. In that time, I have seen it more times than I can remember. My most recent helping was a new re-mastering of the film by the British Film Institute and imported into an exquisite new DVD from the legendary Zeitgeist Films of New York for consumption here in the colonies.

Years ago I was convinced the Quay Twins had, with Institute Benjamenta, fashioned what would, no doubt, attain masterpiece status. I can only reiterate that it is now 17 years later. The film is just as great and gets richer with every viewing.

If that’s not a masterpiece, I don’t know what is.
"Institute Benjamenta" is now available on DVD from Zeitgeist Films. Featuring the exquisite aforementioned transfer from the British Film Institute (personally supervised by the Twins and their brilliant cinematographer Nic Knowland). Thankfully, the picture is presented in its original aspect ratio of 1:1:66 (maybe, aside from standard frame, my favourite aspect ratio of all) and the sound - exquisitely designed and mixed is in Dolby MONO. Yes, MONO! Put aside all your technophile prejudices - there is nothing greater on God's Green Earth than a stunning Mono mix. My only regret here is the "Dolby" part which mutes my favourite part of any mono mix - the gentle, dreamy, hypnotic qualities that only optical sound will impart.

The DVD is accompanied by a number of special features - the best of which are a short, but extremely illuminating "On the Set" item and most thrillingly, the Twins' new short "Eurydice She, So Beloved". I know this is a trifle cheeky of me, but it's so goddamned great I refuse to discuss it here save for urging you to just bloody well buy the disc and discover it for yourself.

Finally, I should mention that not only has it been 17 years since I saw "Institute Benjamenta", but it's also been 17 years since I have had a chance to talk with the Twins. I remember my last conversation with them as if it were only yesterday - wherein we examined a map of Ukraine to see if the Oblast of my people was near the Oblast of Bruno Schulz.

In any event, 17 years is a long time to NOT converse with artists whose work has infused me with such joy, so in honour of the North American release of "Institute Benjamenta" via the Zeitgeist Films label as well as two major programs at the New York Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) – one being a film retrospective entitled "Lip-Reading Puppets: The Curators’ Prescription for Deciphering the Quay Brothers" and the other being a historic exhibit entitled "Quay Brothers: On Deciphering the Pharmacist's Prescription for Lip-Reading Puppets" – please do look forward to my conversation with the Quay Brothers on "Institute Benjamenta" which will soon be appearing in the tres cool movie mag "Electric Sheep - a deviant view of cinema". I'll post a link to it on this site once it is available for online reading.

IF YOU'VE A HANKERING TO PURCHASE ANY OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS, PLEASE DO SO MY ORDERING FROM THE LINKS BELOW AND YOU WILL HAPPILY BE CONTRIBUTING TO THE MAINTENANCE OF THIS SITE:





















Saturday, 19 May 2012

LA HAINE - Review By Greg Klymkiw - The classic 1995 depiction of life in the banlieues of Paris is now available on a magnificent Blu-Ray from the Criterion Collection. The movie is as vital now as it ever was and the package includes a cornucopia of fabulous features to enhance your experience. This is a must-see, must-own work of art!


La Haine (1995) dir. Mathieu Kassovitz

Starring: Vincent Cassel, Hubert Koundé, Saïd Taghmaoui

****

Review By Greg Klymkiw

La Haine was theatrically released 17 years ago, but feels like it could have been made yesterday. Mathieu Kassovitz's rage-fuelled portrait of violence and poverty in the housing projects of Paris within the above-ground-catacomb-like banlieues, pulsates with the raw energy of late-60s-early-70s political thrillers by the likes of Costa-Gavras, but is also charged with the same slice-of-life energy the young Martin Scorsese brought to bear in Who's That Knocking At My Door and Mean Streets.

On the surface, we have the simple tale of three best friends living in the aforementioned slums who have all been affected in different ways by a massive riot kicked off when the police, in a racially-motivated act of thuggery, beat a young man who now lies in a coma and possibly near death. Kassovitz follows Vinz (Cassel), Saïd (Taghoumi) and Hubert (Koundé), a Jew, an Arab and French-African respectively as they encounter a series of prejudicial harassments by the police as they semi-aimlessly attempt to get through a day just after the banlieues have been besieged by the carnage.

The young man who was murdered was a close pal of Vinz and when he finds a .44 Magnum lost by a cop during the urban mêlée, he hopes to gain neighbourhood "respect" by vowing to kill a cop in retaliation. Hubert is a sleek, powerful, though gentle boxer who's managed to make a place for himself in the world by owning a gym, but overnight he's become a member of the disenfranchised once again as his pride and joy has been gutted by a riot-enflamed fire. Saïd longs to escape life in the slums, but also feels powerless to truly leave them and his immediate aim is to collect a debt from a mid-level drug kingpin.

Kassovitz, though he shot in colour, exposes and filters all his shots for black and white, which the film was eventually released on. Though it's not "true" monochrome, it comes damn close and most astoundingly, though he has chosen to shoot handheld, there's not a single shot that isn't superbly composed. Even more thrilling is that it's seldom handheld in the whirly-cam-herky-jerky miasma so popular in low budget films and most annoyingly, in mega-budgeted contemporary blockbusters, usually from directors with no eye who attempt to be cool and "cinematic" (and sadly, manage to pull the wool over the many eyes of both public and critics).

The blocking and use of actual locations is masterly - all the more astounding as Kassovitz was in his late-20s when he made this film. Within the magnificent compositions, the movements of those in-frame and the camera itself are always rooted in both dramatic beats and emotion - no fakery or fancy-schmancy here. Kassovitz has nothing to prove other than to expose the lives of the people who live in the banlieues in a vivid, vital fashion.

Even more stunning is how the youthful helmer handles a sequence where the trio "journey" to Paris. Reminiscent, though not "borrowed" from The Warriors, Walter Hill's amazing 70s kaleidoscope of never-never-Land gang violence, the point of view feels so true to the experience of the characters - allowing us to feel their own wonder and amazement at being transported into the urban bustle of Gay Paree. The various neighbourhoods in Hill's film felt like distinctively different worlds and not in the same city at all - so too is this captured by Kassovitz in La Haine.

In the banlieues, we are so immersed in an immediacy and reality, it feels like Kassovitz was born and raised there (which he wasn't, though he and his team spent a considerable amount of time living there prior to shooting).

His entire cast, including many non-actors from the banlieues is always first-rate, but the revelation upon the film's initial release and astounding even now is the controlled intensity of the brilliant Vincent Cassel (most notably and recently seen as the equally intense ballet impresario in Aronofsky's Black Swan).

Head-on, Cassel is a triangle-domed seething dragon - his enormous crown holding globes for eyes - watery worlds casting roiling seas of hatred upon us and all who dare look upon him. In profile, he's like a bald eagle crossed with a sort of punk extra-terrestrial je ne sais quoi who would, if he had any, eat his newborn straight from the stirrup-spread loins of mummy - making sure to savour as much of the glistening blood and globs of afterbirth with Mephistophelian relish.

His idol is none other than Travis Bickle, DeNiro's psychotic cabbie in Scorsese's Taxi Driver. His recreations of the "Are you talking to me?" mirror sequence chill to the bone. Many filmmakers have, over the years, referenced Scorsese, but save for Boogie Nights, most of these sequences feel more like homage than story and/or character beats. Here again, it's rooted completely in the world of the film. Someone like Vinz - not only in the 90s, but frankly in any age beyond the 70s would, to varying degrees choose someone like Travis Bickle to idolize.

This, finally brings us to the truly staggering genius and power of La Haine proper and its vitality to both the generation it represents and subsequent generations. The movie on every level is timeless and I suspect its importance to both film art and society at large will continue to live and breathe for years, if not decades to come.

The gap between rich and poor as presented by Kassovitz feels no different than what faces the world today and in fact, has become wider and will frighteningly continue to do so. At any stage I suspect his great picture will always feel modern - his classical style adorned with the flourish of cinéma vérité and its shattering portrait of have-nots within a police state makes it then, now and forever a universal work of art.

Some have suggested (always in positive terms) that the film's ending is ambiguous. If you watch the film with open eyes, you'll see this is absolutely not true. A pair of eyes close in the final frames, but in so doing reflect the sad truth for many of us - that no matter what our dreams might be in this world of shit we live in, what we see is what we get.

La Haine sees what we all see, or what we choose not to see.

The picture is definitely headed for masterpiece status.

"La Haine" is currently available in a brand new and phenomenally sumptuous visual rendering on Blu-Ray from the virtually untouchable Criterion Collection. It's accompanied by a number of interesting features which I urge you to watch AFTER you see the movie (even if you HAVE seen the movie before). It's best to let the picture work its magic upon you before diving into the goodies provided. One of my favourites is actually an introductory message from actor-director Jodie Foster who so loved the film that she bankrolled and masterminded its journey to North American audiences in the 90s. (It did extremely well, grossing about $300,000 which 17 years ago was pretty astounding for a black and white French film of such dark subject matter.)

Foster's perceptions are on the money, but it's also wonderful to experience her clear and genuine love for the movie. It's exciting and kind of infectious. And not to belittle her words or intelligence, but it seems like she harbours a mad crush on Kassovitz. The transfer was supervised and the entire edition is one of Criterion's Director-Approved editions. Other wonderful features include a commentary track, a solid documentary on the film, a featurette on the banlieue, production footage, deleted and extended scenes all accompanied by Kassovitz rendering after-comments, the usual array of photos and trailers, plus a terrific booklet, the highlight of which is an appreciation by Costa-Gavras himself.

What's really odd is that the movie was never released on DVD and only available on VHS. Happily, Criterion remedied this situation a couple of years ago and now, we have an even superior home format to see the movie on. This movie, however, is NOT worth renting, downloading, streaming, netflixing or any other inferior method of delivery. JUST BUY IT!!!