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the international federation of film critics | |||||||||||||||
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London 2006 London Film Festival Jubilee
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| "Ghosts" by Nick Broomfield | |
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| "Repirse" by Joachim Trier | |
Among the twelve first or second features submitted to the FIPRESCI Jury (and whose choice seemed sometimes quite arbitrary, leaving aside more worthy candidates like Le Pressentiment, 12-08 East of Bucharest or Fresh Air), we would like to single out besides the prize-winning Lola, unanimously voted by the jury, Ghosts, Nick Broomfield's second fiction, which benefits from the strong documentary background of its director. Starting with the death by drowning of twentyone Chinese cocklepickers in Morecambe Bay in February 2004, the film traces the journey from China to Britain of one migrant, Ai Quin Lin, and dissects the whole system of exploitation from the organizers of the trip who impose an extravagant amount of money to the passenger, to the Chinese fixer in England and the ruthless British landlord, and finally the racist natives who beat up the illegal immigrants. The film is a worthy companion in the docu-drama tradition to Michael Winterbottom's Road to Guantanamo. Reprise, a Norwegian first feature by Joachim Trier depicts with visual flair and a very controlled mise en scène the literary world of Oslo and the ambitions of two writers who want to do something creative. Old Joy, a minimalist Sideways by American helmer Kelly Reichardt, shows the same visual quality in its beautiful evocation of the North Western woodlands, though its contemplative style to describe the decaying relationship of two friends lends a certain tedium to this road movie.
One quarter of the films in the FIPRESCI selection dealt with the theme of pedophilia, arguably a rather disproportionate ratio. The most interesting was The Little Children, Todd Fields's second feature (after In the Bedroom) which takes place in the suburbs of Boston and shows with a satiric edge how the fear of a pedophile just released from prison reveals the frustrations and the discontent of a number of middle class neighbours. In Wild Tigers I have Known, the underground American director Cam Archer creates a pseudo poetic dreamlike atmosphere to portray the crash of a 13 year-old boy for an adult while The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros (with the same scene of an effeminate youngster putting on lipstick to seduce a cop) is more rewarding though rather rambling in its narrative. It at least reveals its director Auroeus Solito as a disciple of Lino Brocka able to portray the lower depths of Manila.
recent festivals |
London 2006
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