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Amsterdam 2003
You can’t always get what you want
by Flavia de la Fuente
The IDFA is a very special event. It is amazing that a documentary
film festival has been able to become a major attraction for the city
and the professional world. Not only more than 230 films were screened
this year in Amsterdam, but almost every screening was a sold out, totalizing
more than 110.000 tickets. Not only 2000 guests attended, but they created
an intense atmosphere of work and exchange. The audience was so warm that
big applause after each film seemed mandatory, and the Q&As (they
followed almost every screening) left the public in their seats. Under
the always enthusiastic direction of Ally Derks (a red headed, permanent
warm smile), the organization was very efficient and the amount of workshops,
talkshows and special events was outstanding (80 volunteers hosted these
activities under the also volunteer work of the filmmaker Peter Wintonick
who stayed in Amsterdam for 2 months to prepare the social-professional
gatherings). Not to speak about the Forum, probably the main world co-production
market for documentaries.
Unfortunately, the pleasure of participating in such a happy
going film festival was much bigger than the pleasure I had with the First
Appearance selection that our jury had to judge. Probably, this has to
do less with the program itself than with a certain tendency that can
be observed in present day documentaries: the idea that film should imitate
television in its more banal and sensationalistic aspects. There was a
time when the discussions around the IDFA and other documentary venues
was the distinction between creation and reportage. Also, years ago, the
IDFA was criticized for its excess of humanistic or politically involved
films in detriment of form. In certain ways you can look at the weakest
of these films with certain nostalgia: a film based purely in content
or information is better than the new trend (strongly based on American
models) of documentaries which only purpose seems to be to shock the audience
with the emotion of spying other people’s private lives, as TV has
been doing from Big Brother on. Not all our films were like that, but
it seems that filmmakers and producers think more and more that the audience
has lost a main virtue of the filmgoer: patience. That’s why maybe,
the short film we awarded (The Very Best Day by Pavel Medvedev) was considered
by some as “too classical”, meaning too slow, too beautiful,
too old fashioned. Or why another interesting short of the selection,
Outcaste by Jonathan Bland, that consists in fixed camera long shots of
a very intriguing beggar (or holy man) in India was unacceptable for many.
In this film, the power of cinema as an instrument for observing the world
was fully employed. And fully rejected. It seems that many people don’t
want to watch in the movies, they want to be told. Or they want to be
overwhelmed by what they see: extreme experiences, disturbing images,
endless footage of people suffering. At one point, during the IDFA´s
10 days I thought that I got more pleasure from looking at the audience
enjoy than from the images that this very audience was watching on screen.
Flavia de la Fuente
© FIPRESCI 2003
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