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Brisbane 2008 War on Terror
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| "Good Cats" by Ying Liang |
In addition to this look back into Europe's recent past, Brisbane offered a broad spectrum of films ranging from experimental to exploitation. Of course, the perspective from Down Under is a different one from Europe's East-West focus. Asia is close, as sections such as those on young Asian-Pacific cinema and Thai cinema show. Most impressive was Good Cats (Hao mao), Chinese director Ying Liang's low-budget, independently produced picture shot with a digital camera. The film tells the story of a young man from the countryside who tries to make fast money in the office of a real estate shark — unsuccessfully. It uses a heavy metal rock band like a Greek chorus to comment on the goings-on, as irritating McDonald's radio commercial with cheerful children's interrupting the Olympic games. Good Cats won the FIPRESCI Award in Brisbane. In China, the film will probably never reach movie screens, but it will continue to avoid government control when it is released on DVD.
Salma feels the effects of a different kind of terror — that of governments. She is a Palestinian widow who lives directly on the Israeli border and lovingly cultivates the lemon orchard she inherited from her father. Her new neighbor on the other side of the border is the Israeli Defense Minister whose bodyguards suspect terrorists behind every tree, and therefore want to raze Salma's orchard. A hard-bitten struggle ensues, which goes all the way to the highest court in Israel. The Palestinian woman taking on the mighty Israel government is reminiscent of David and Goliath in this struggle for justice. Hiam Abbass (The Syrian Bride) is first-rate as Salma, who has to put up with politics dominated by men on both sides of the border and who finally gains an ally in the form of the Defense Minister's wife. The Israeli-French co-production Lemon Tree (directed by Eran Riklis), made with German financial participation — and in which the ugly concrete wall at the end has certain affinities with the Berlin Wall — will be released in Germany soon. Riklis' absurd, satirical story relies on its imagery. When, at the end, the Defense Minister stands in front of his protective wall, it seems more like a prison wall in which he is captured. The film is an allegory about the walls in our heads. The films in an intelligently programmed festival such as Brisbane can be very helpful in allowing us look over such walls.
Bodo Fründt, born in 1945, former editor of the magazine "Stern", is a German free lance film critic. He is the author of books on Alfred Hitchcock, German Films in Cannes, and TV documentaries about Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese and Stanley Donen.
| recent festivals |
Brisbane 2008
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