 |
| coming soon
|
|
 |
Bratislava 2003
Pride, Prejudice, and Stereotypes
by Ingeborg Bratoeva
The Bratislava International Film Festival is held literally
in the middle of Europe, in a city traditionally considered to be on the
border between the European East and the European West. Maybe the location
was the reason that made me look at this year’s ambitiously set
and well-rounded program, first and foremost as an excellent basis for
a screen dialogue between Eastern and Western Europe. Furthermore, festivals
seem to be today the only place where Europeans can still carry out this
kind of cinematic conversation. Exposed to a commercial distribution,
dominated by American productions, nowadays European audiences barely
have access to their neighbors’ cinemas. So, I was intrigued by
the variety of European films, shown in and out of the festival competition,
which have been inspired by the East-West contact. Therefore, I took the
challenge to go after screen representations and self-representations
of East Europeans and West Europeans.
At the end of the event I was disappointed to discover
that more then one decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall, and claiming
a Europe ready to integrate its East, we still reproduce and develop screen
stereotypes of misunderstanding, disrespect and ignorance. East Europeans
appeared in the festival selection of West European films predominantly
as illegal immigrants, prostitutes, and criminals. I could best illustrate
this attitude with a description from the synopsis of “Brucio nel
vento” (“Burning in the Wind”), a co-production between
Italy and Switzerland, shown in the European Film Section: “Tobias
Horvath was born in a “village without a name” somewhere in
Eastern Europe. He grew up in poverty, fatherless, and with a mother who
was an occasional prostitute.” However, it was not only the Italian
director Silvio Soldini who labeled an East European character as a marginal.
Even young directors from the East, like the Romanian Calin Peter (“Maria”)
and the Slovenian Damjan Kozole (“Rezervni deli”/”Spare
Parts”, shown also in the Section “European Film”) followed
that stereotype. Presenting East Europeans on screen generally as marginal
characters belongs to a tendency of misunderstood social criticism, which
threatens European cinema with a loss of its artistic strength. This trend
puts especially the new East European cinema in danger, modifying it into
a marginalized duplicate of Western sensitivity and interpretation. Copying
and imitating the worst Western stereotypes about their own reality, the
majority of young directors from the East limit their themes according
to Western clichés, stay away from a lot of important dilemmas
in their own societies, and eventually lose genuineness and authenticity
of their films.
The same problem emerged from the depiction of West European
characters, which were represented on screen predominantly as unscrupulous
exploiters, slave-drivers, and sexual perverts, as in two films from the
competition: the Austrian film “Struggle”, and again in “Maria”
(a co-production between Romania, Germany and France). Overrated social
criticism prevented their directors from giving a proper picture of how
human beings approach other human beings without the clichés of
a social struggle between presumably wealthy and bad people from the West,
and supposedly poor and good guys from the East. From this point of view,
I give my preference to those young European directors who succeeded in
uncovering different levels of reality, and who examined them without
forced social criticism, and with no trouble-free escapism, as well. I
would like to mention Vladimir Moravek (“Nuda v Brne”/”Bored
in Brno”), Marek Bukowski (“Sukces…”/”Success…”),
and Michael Pfeifenberger (“011 Beograd”). The last film,
screened out of the competition, presented a more productive direction
in portraying young people from Eastern Europe, even if they exist on
the edge of chaos and crime in a city recently troubled by war (Belgrade.)
Pfeifenberger, like Moravek and Bukowski, escaped the stereotype because
he preferred to portray personalities than rendering social categories.
Moreover, all three young directors never forgot to shape their stories
with a sense of humor, even black or uneasy, but tough enough to set up
the directors’ distance from the pathetic stereotype of the lost
marginal East European.
Ingeborg Bratoeva
© FIPRESCI 2003
top |
|
|