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Miami 2006"The Master"
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These first metaphors — the blind boy who feels the freedom waving in his face but can't see what the future looks like, and the artist locked in a cage while the animals are free — these metaphors express Trzaskalski's intentions to give subtle political statements. Later on, the bus-circus is joined by a prostitute rescued by the Master from being sexually abused by two men and a mysterious accordion player. They travel together enchanting people with the almost magical Master's numbers with knives, until he achieves, if not his Parisian dream, then at least the capacity of levitating over sharpened swords, which seems to be much more like a supernatural power than an illusionist performance.
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| Piotr Trzaskalski | |
To score his goal on making his story believable, Trzaskalski got the precious help of two people: the cinematographer Piotr Sliskowski and the main actor, Konstantin Lavronenko. Everyone remembers Lavronenko's remarkable performance as the father in The Return, the Russian film that won the Golden Lion at Venice and the FIPRESCI prize at Palm Springs. Again he plays the role of a tough man with no name, who has a very particular way of showing his feelings. But unlike the father's muteness, the Master talks a lot, and Lavronenko has such a strong performance on screen that it's quite impossible not to believe in him — what doesn't happen with some of the other characters. Sliskowski contributes with astonishing cinemascope cinematography. It's hard to believe that he shot those beautiful long travelings digitally, specially the lake scene where the boat is surrounded by fog, thus creating a compelling atmosphere.
Trzaskalski first feature, Edi, was awarded with the Ecumenical prize and the FIPRESCI prize in Berlin 2003. There, he started dealing with social issues about Eastern European outsiders, introducing some religious parables that could be related to Buddhism. In some way, he does the same here. He has still a lot to learn, especially on screenwriting, but it's not in every festival that we see fresh ideas expressed in such a powerful cinematographic way.
Marcelo Janot is the president of Brazil's FIPRESCI section. He is the editor of the site www.criticos.com.br, contributes to the daily "Jornal do Brasil", and appears periodically on Brazilian television channels Telecine and TVE.
| recent festivals |
Miami 2006
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