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Fribourg 2006"Be With Me"
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"Be With Me" by Eric
Khoo |
One of the highlights of the competition at the 20th edition of the Fribourg International Film Festival in Switzerland was Be With Me by eminent Singaporean auteur Eric Khoo.
The third feature by Eric Khoo, a darling
of the Cannes film festival, whose Be With Me is his first solo
outing since 1997 with 12 Storeys (Shier lou) in the section
Un Certain Regard. Be With Me opened last year the Directors'
Fortnight. It is a touching, virtually wordless evocation (with scarcely
ten minutes of dialogue) of universal lust for love, hope and communication.
Three bittersweet stories, two fictional and one half
fact based, are crisscrossed through the modest means of excellent cinematic
storytelling, fine performances of leading actors, a clean composition
of dark tone of the camera work (Adrian Tan) and with emotionally disturbing
images.
The film opens with an unseen person, later revealed
to be amazing Theresa Chan, a deaf and blind 61-year-old woman who is
a kind of South East Asia's Helen Keller whose real life story is mixed
with other fictional vignettes in Be With Me. Typing on an old
manual typewriter Chan poses and answers the question: "Is a true
love truly there, my love? Yes, if your warm heart is", which sets
the tone for the fictional characters' search for love in a rather emotionally
bleak world.
Three fictional stories are all obliquely mixed with
the documentary true story. The first story (Finding Love) focuses on
a security guard Fatty Koh (Seet Keng Yew), who lives with his abusive
family, and is equally addicted to fatty food and a beautiful girl (Lynn
Poh) who works in the neighborhood. The second story (So in Love) involves
two Singaporean teenage girls. Sam (Samantha Tan) and Jackie (Ezann Lee)
are dedicated to text messaging. They fall in love with each other. But
romance fades away as soon as one of them meets a boy. In the third and
most complicated story (Meant to Be), we are faced with an old shopkeeper
(played excellently by Chiew Sung Ching), who cooks and cares for his
ailing wife. After the death of his wife he finds new inspiration in
the autobiography of Theresa Chan (starring herself) as his life crosses
with hers in a blend of fiction and reality. This awkward combination
unfortunately does not work dramatically well and undercuts the highly
achieved level of the film's minimalism with documentary quotes from
Chan's life.
Though some of Khoo's admirers can complain that Be With Me lacks the touch of sardonic critique of Singapore's sterile life as shown in his previous films, Khoo has made an excellent film: a work of fine art, an enthralling experience of minimalism, with a deep, touching and lasting expression.
Borislav Andjelic is a film critic of the daily newspaper "Vecernje Novosti" from Belgrade and currently the president of the FIPRESCI section of Serbia and Montenegro.
| recent festivals |
Fribourg 2006
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