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Buenos Aires 2003
Critics as Stars
By Carlos Alberto Mattos
The
Buenos Aires Independent Film Festival (Bafici) is somewhat of a paradise
for film critics. It’s not only curated and directed by critics,
but it also stresses the role of the critique in its selection, catalogue
etc. The concept of “independent film”, so broad as to include
films by Spike Lee, Alexander Sokurov or that eccentric filmmaker you’d
never heard about him before, is more a statement than a tangible criteria:
for Eduardo Antin and his fellow critics, independent films are all films
with a strong, visible aesthetic or formal personality and which were
not produced by any big studio or film company.
These characteristics – or qualities – are underlined
in each written synopsis or oral introduction to a film in the festival.
This doesn’t mean that you won’t find some disjointed scripts,
awkward mises-en-scène or daring but frustrated experiments. This
is not the point at the Bafici. Critics from different countries come
to Buenos Aires not for the last stroke of perfection, but for a fresh
look, a personal revelation, a glimpse into the possible future of cinema.
With an audience of more than 200.000 people (a growth of
35% over 2002), this is not a festival for critics only. Buenos Aires
may be the spot where the utopia of a perfect harmony of tastes between
critics and massive audience takes place.
On the pages of the daily paper published by the festival,
some critics attending the event gave long and consistent interviews,
as if they were stars – which, at the Bafici, in fact they are,
as much as the filmmakers. Four critics were invited as curators of different
sections of the festival this year. Simon Field presented “Great
Britain: Eccentrics and Visionaires”. Adrian Martin brought to Buenos
Aires “A Secret History of Australian Cinema (1970-2000)”.
Bernard Bénoliel curated “The Speeds of Cinema”. Tony
Rayns chose the titles in “New Queer Cinema from China”.
And of course there were the films made by critics. I was
able to see three of them: “Lesbianas de Buenos Aires” (“Lesbians
of Buenos Aires”), by Santiago Garcia, “Yo no sé que
me han hecho tus ojos” (“I Wonder What Your Eyes Did to Me”),
by Sergio Wolf (and Lorena Muñoz), and the short “The Tour”,
by Deborah Young.
Sergio Garcia is a film professor and a critic in the Argentine
magazine El Amante/Cine. He has made some shorts on the theme of lesbians
before selecting half a dozen women for this frank and unaffected feature
documentary. Their testimonials cover a wide range of subjects, as the
urge for maternity, familiar acceptance and rejection, political militance,
football and tortillas. The “tortas” (as they are called in
the local slang) speak openly and warmly about their wishes, preferences,
habits, occupations. One of them goes to the kitchen and shows the making
of a special tortilla, proving that irony and fairplay have a lot to win
over prejudices and fear.
Garcia makes its way to the very heart of his “characters”,
creating rare moments of exhilaration and emotional confrontation. “Lesbianas
de Buenos Aires” ends up being a courageous piece of disclosure
in a society marked by the macho-culture and the rigid gender rules of
tango. It would have been even better if the director had not emphasized
so much the role of soccer as a way of social inclusion and emotional
sublimation.. Monica, who gives the main testimonials and is a passionate
fan of this sport, takes about one third of the documentary along to soccer
fields and a stadium. That makes the film loose its balance and stress
a current stereotype about the masculinization of lesbians. Some of the
female spectators who attended the release of the film in the festival
reacted with anger to this point.
Also risky was the choice of not bringing to the screen
the world in which those women lead their daily lives and the persons
they interact with. Hence results the impression that the lesbians of
Buenos Aires live within a ghetto. Something Sergio Garcia was eager to
prove the opposite.
“Yo no sé que me han hecho tus ojos”,
awarded by the Fipresci jury as the best Latin American film in the whole
festival, is also a documentary. But the universe of fiction is almost
indistinguishable, since it deals with legendary stories from Argentinean
music and cinema. Lorena Muñoz and Sergio Wolf managed to combine
cinephilic passion and investigative skills in the search for the elusive
tango singer Ada Falcón. A beautiful and gifted star in the 1930’s,
Ada decided to break all ties with the mundane world, hand out her fortune
to the poor and become a nun in 1942.
For six decades she has succeeded in being forgotten. Sergio
Wolf says he’s been “possessed” by her story and made
a film to share this possession with others. Born in Buenos Aires, Wolf
has worked as a film critic in radio, has been a director of Film Magazine,
is a teacher and the author/editor of some books on Argentinean cinema
and relations film-literature. He stars “Yo no sé…”
as a kind of private eye in the tradition of noir films (trenchcoat included),
as he follows the route to a distant monastery where Ada still lived in
the year of 2002. She would die a few months after she finnaly agreed
to be filmed in front of a TV set, trying to recover small bits of memory
of her golden years. In terms of Argentine culture, it is comparable to
an encounter with Greta Garbo in her last days.
What makes this concise (64 minutes) and warmhearted documentary
remarkable is not only the fact that it achieves all its goals: finding
Ada Falcón and clarifying traces of the reasons why she changed
her life so drastically, something related to her forbidden love affair
with famous, powerful – and married “maestro” Francisco
Canaro. The film title refers to a valse composed by Canaro and supposedly
inspired by Ada’s deep green eyes.
The filmmakers understood the melodramatic quality of this
true story and made large use of pieces from Argentinean fiction films
to reconstruct Ada’s itinerary, as well as to evoke the atmosphere
of the 30’s and 40’s. They did it with a great sense of mood
and rhythm, plus a sound editing that wonderfully transports the viewer
in time.
The notion of disparition is crucial for the people of Argentina,
given the nostalgic appeal of their popular culture and, in recent decades,
the call for the political “desaparecidos” during the military
dictatorship. In one of the most haunting moments, the film identifies
famous addresses of theatres, dancing halls and studios of Buenos Aires,
where Ada Falcón had her glory days, now converted to lousy burger
joints, discount stores, and the like.
When Ada finally reappears for what was destined to be just
a brief goodbye, her face and voice devastated by time, it seems a miracle
that could only belong to the realm of moving pictures.
Deborah Young’s “The Tour” is a short
fiction film about the momentaneous inner journey of a tourist guide to
a moment when her past and her imagination get indissolubly mixed. It
was shot in Rome, Italy, and Istria, Croatia, but the two locations lie
no further than some steps from each other in the editing. Eleonora (played
by Italian actress Anna Galiena) just turns her back to the Roman Colosseum
and is suddenly facing a Croatian beach. She meets her brother (Alessandro
Averone), who she believed was dead, and follows him in a visit to an
old village where they spent their childhood together. Time seems to folder
in itself as the visit unfolds.
An American living in Italy, film reviewer and ex-chief
of the Roman bureau of Variety, Young probably puts her own experiences
of memory and displacement to the benefit of her film, which she also
wrote. “The Tour” has the subtlety of casual remembrances
and its clarity leaves intact the density of a mystery.
Carlos Alberto Mattos
© FIPRESCI 2003
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