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Rotterdam 2008 Figures in a Landscape
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"The Sky, the Earth and the Rain" |
The landscape that appears as a documentary image used as (stunningly beautiful) background is transformed into a traumatic space of mourning that can only be reclaimed through murder and a ritual funeral. The ghosts have to be exorcised — if they ever can be.
Chilean director José Luis Torres Leiva has a background in documentary, which is very evident in his first feature, The Sky, the Earth and the Rain. He shot the film in the south of Chile, in the Valdivia Rivers district. The landscape there is very powerful, and in its ruggedness quite beautiful. As in Wonderful Town, nature is a third character. And here, too, it takes on a more metaphysical meaning. As in Antonioni's trilogy from the sixties (or tetralogy, if you count Red Desert as well) the natural surroundings and the way they are shot are used to comment on the characters. Without much dialogue, and relying on a subtle soundtrack, Torres Leiva makes the loneliness of his main, female character evident. By shooting her as a tiny figure when she strolls through the forest, for instance, he visually reveals her mental state. She is lonely, just as the landscape is, as shown by Torres Leiva through slowly paced camera movements that broodingly investigate the imposing nature. She is lost in herself, a feeling reinforced by the film's sense of her as lost in the landscape.
Her inability to express her emotions and desires in a direct manner leads to a beautiful scene in the house of the man she cleans for. He is lying on his bed and is sleeping deeply. She comes into the room, slowly bending herself over him. When their lips almost touch, she retreats. Like the branches of a big tree blown by the wind, they connect with each other briefly and then move on again. No wonder Torres Leiva begins his film with a magnificent travelling shot through the woods and even up into a tree, with branches that slowly rustle. No matter how slowly life may move, it is always in transformation. The loneliness in The Sky, the Earth and the Rain is not a depressing, fixed state, but something the main character has to come to terms with. Then she can move on. Into nature. Into anything.
André Waardenburg is editor-in-chief of the Dutch monthly film magazine "SKRIEN", and film critic for the daily newspaper "NRC Handelsblad".
recent festivals |
Rotterdam 2008
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