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Riga 2006Don't Swallow the Button
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The Bothersome Man |
The Latvian cinema, with budget of 1.5m euros annually (one third of which is spent by administration) definitely needs some encouragement. The state seems to be favouring theatre (subsidized by twice as much money as cinema) and is most concerned to preserve tradition of opera (four times as much). Indeed, the fact is that Richard Wagner himself conducted 15 operas in Riga between 1837 and 1839. A visit to the top-notch contemporary Latvian National Opera (opened in 1863) by your reporter proves that the investment does not go to waste.
If you think about Latvian cinema (as well as Arsenals), think small. It was as if the festival program was selected in manner of FIPRESCI guidlines, since a dozen odd films included in 2006 Arsenals were already favoured by various FIPRESCI juries. Unable to compete with festivals that boast ten times bigger budgets, Arsenals seem to choose films off the beaten track, which sometimes leaves the total of five cinemas (normally programmed with 94% of US films) in Riga empty.
Some screenings, on the other hand, were packed with curious young audience, as it was the case of the innovativelly directed Mexican film Battle in Heaven. Showing Russian silents accompanied by live orchestra, such as the movingly innocent melodrama The Dying Swan from 1917, is a nice touch as well as a crowd-pleaser, perhaps one of the very few concessions to 30% strong Russian population in Riga.
Indeed, judging by Riga's opulent lifestyles, its inhabitants had everything to gain and nothing to lose by breaking loose from the Soviet Union. With Arsenals it is not the case: established in 1986, it cut an axe with premiering films by Iosselani, Sokurov, Balabanov, Ovcharov and other filmmakers whose work could not be seen elsewhere in the Soviet Union. The indipendence brought a challenge rather than a liberation. The festival barely survived in 1988, as the federal Soviet state cut its budget. After all the possibilities were exhausted, director Sukuts finally got a credit from an eccentric man in charge of one kolhoz (an agricultural cooperative) in Syberia.
As Maris Gailis, co-founder of the Arsenals became Latvia's Prime Minister, the later fate of the Arsenals was secured. It seems that nothing about this festival is ordinary, except its name, picked up probably from Riga's Arsenals Museum of Contemporary Art. A bi-annual event, Arsenals just celebrated its 20th birthday. May the milk flow and Riga International Film Forum live long enough to become and old-age pensioner.
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Riga 2006
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