Filmmaking, Sumo and Space Tourism Take Flight at IDFA
by Brian Brooks (November 24, 2009)
Outside the Tuschinski Theater in Amsterdam. Photo by Brian Brooks/indieWIRE
A man who travels to small villages making movies, a Japanese boy who leaves his village to join a sumo group, and American millionaires who pay huge sums to have the chance to experience outer space with the Russian space agency are three films screening here at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) that turn the spotlight on lifestyles. Argentine directors Eduardo de la Serna, Lucas Marcheggiano and Adriana Nidia Yurovich’s “The Peddler” (El ambulante) profiles a filmmaker who brings new meaning to the DIY approach. Daniel Burmeister drives around in a beat-up car approaching the local mayor in a village with a proposal: He will film a feature in the town using locals in exchange for room and board and using a camera he already owns. The doc follows this very charming man as he undertakes one project in a small Argentine town. Using his seductive charisma, he captivates the towns people and they become a part of his project. After filming, he even drives through the town with a loudspeaker offering screening times as part of his own marketing blitz. The town comes out to see the film, and they are the stars. “There is a saying in Argentina that if there’s a problem, you fix it with a string,” said Marcheggiano referring to how Burmeister devised clever but basic ways to repair technical snafus that inevitably occur when filming. “He’s made over 50 films in 11 years, using a [rotation] of about five scripts.” Eighteen year-old Takuya leaves his village in Japan’s northern main island of Hokkaido for the capital, Tokyo, to train as an apprentice sumo wrestler in the world premiere of Jill Coulon’s “A Normal Life: Chronicle of a Sumo Wrestler.” Despite trepidation, Takuya enrolls in a sumo school to please his father. Typical of Japanese, Takuya hides his emotion as his father tells him “not to fail” and says before he leaves that if he drops out of the program “there is no place here for you.” His mother died three years prior to cancer, and his only other close relation is his sister. Coulon, who undertook the project originally planning to follow a Mongolian sumo wrestler who moves to Japan but then found Takuya, goes into the secretive and insular world of sumo, following Takuya’s preparations for tournaments, sponsors’ dinners. He misses his friends from his hometown, and as a new wrestler, he has to act as a personal assistant to the more established wrestlers. He reveals his doubts about his new life in phone conversations with his sister at a laundromat at night as he washes the other wrestlers’ belts, saying he just wants a normal life.
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