Eagerly Expressing The Obvious: Berlin Critic’s Notebook by Shane Danielsen (February 9, 2009)
A scene from Michael Glawogger's "Das Vaterspiel" (Kill Daddy Good Night). Image courtesy of the Berlin Film Festival.
Five days into the 2009 Berlinale, and amid grumblings of discontent from critics (“Twenty films so far,” said one colleague, “and I haven’t seen one thing I’d champion”) and a pronounced lack of enthusiasm among buyers, one sensed a new tone to proceedings: if the program couldn’t entertain us, then by god it was going to IMPROVE us. Indeed, if Berlin 09 will be remembered for anything, it will be for its eagerness to tell us, with every ounce of anguished sincerity it could muster, the bleeding obvious. Take “Rage”, the latest from British writer-director Sally Potter, in which she pronounces her judgment upon the fashion industry. It’s bad, apparently. Bad for women (forced to be too thin) and bad for society (encouraged to be superficial and modish). This conclusion, blindingly apparent to anyone who’s ever browsed an issue of Vogue or Surface—or, I don’t know, visited a shop—appears to have struck Potter with the force of holy revelation. Something must be done! she thought (sitting in what, I do not doubt, would be an exquisitely decorated home, with a wardrobe full of lovely clothes). The truth must be told! That she chose to respond without much apparent sense of how the fashion industry actually functions, and via a stylistic device that would exclude all but the most dedicated arthouse audiences (the film is a series of direct-to-camera interviews with stars like Jude Law and Judi Dench—all in character—shot against super-saturated backgrounds), attests either to the urgency of her mission (no time to waste on research!), or her unshakeable conviction that She Knows Best. Charity obliges me to believe the former; experience, however, suggests the latter. No less sanctimonious was “Mammoth”, Lucas Moodyson’s attempt to re-connect with commercial audiences following a couple of wayward semi-experimental (or just plain unpleasant) features. A slick, globe-hopping slice of contemporary First World guilt, in the tradition of “Babel” (right down to its interlocked, tripartite structure), and like that film, it was positively besotted with its own worthiness. To my surprise, it was roundly booed at the press screening. Rape is bad, too—as we learned from “Storm”, a German drama from Hans-Christian Schmid, whose exorcism drama “Requiem” was a powerful entry in the 2006 competition. This one, mostly in English, starred Kerry Fox as a prosecuting attorney for the EU War Crimes Tribunal, trying to convict a Serbian war criminal who, we discover, was not so busy ethnic-cleansing his region as to forget to establish rape camps in one of its larger hotels.
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