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Gijón 2006 A Guide to Recognizing Good Films
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Larry Clark's Wassup Rockers |
Real refreshment was found in the assortment of short films presented before the features in competition. Among them were shorts from Eastern European countries like Hungary, Poland and Romania, whose feature films, for whatever reason, were not in the main program. Perhaps by way of compensation, Gijon presented a major retrospective of motion pictures from that region produced in the 1960s and 1970s, among them such masterpieces as Andrei Tarkovsky's Andrey Rublyov, Milos Forman's The Fireman's Ball (Horí, má panenko), Jiri Menzel's Closely Watched Trains (Ostre sledované vlaky) and Dusan Makavejev's W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism (W.R. — Misterije organizma).
A festival within the festival was a selection called "Enfants Terribles", which presented 14 movies — ten live-action, four animated — dealing with the concerns of young people's lives. This sidebar was a major treasure of the festival in Gijon, supported by three key director retrospectives dedicated to the opuses of France's Bruno Dumont, the young and agile work of Argentina's Lisandro Alonso, and the controversial films of Larry Clark — the biggest star of the festival — who apart from his movies presented a collection of photographs he'd shot between 1963 to 1983. (Fantastic!)
And that is not all: Several other sections of the festival comprised some 60 more short, documentary, musical, animated and experimental films. All in all, it seems that other programs were better orchestrated then the main selection. (I suspect this was less indicative of an oversight than the fact that certain highly desired titles were simply not available to be programmed.)
My jury didn't face a difficult choice: The decision to award the International Critics' Prize to Valeska Grisebach's Longing (Sehnsucht) was in every way justified and right. (This appears to have been confirmed by the film's selection by the festival's official jury, as well.)
Certainly, there were also other movies worthy of acknowledgment: Dito Monteil's A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, Jafar Panahi's Offside, and above all Julia Loktev's Day Night Day Night. I presume that, as they make their way through the crowded festival circuit, they will not be short of awards.
Ivan Karl was born in Belgrade. He graduated the Faculty of Drama Arts. He writes film and TV reviews for several magazines, and is editor-in-chief at the cable TV movie channel Film Plus. He has been an associate of Film Center Serbia since 2005.
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Gijón 2006
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