Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 2016)
February 17, 2016 Black History Month Page 9 Strong Start for International Film Fest o PinionAted J udge by J udge d Arleen o rtegA Normally by this point in my Portland International Film Fes- tival itinerary, I would have seen something I didn’t like! But so far this year’s slate has been very strong. Of the ilms I’ve seen, here are the ones that will play again, in my order of preference: “The Clan” tells the story of a notorious Argentine crime fam- ily whose patriarch, Arquimedes Puccio, worked for the police during the Videla regime in the 1970s, when kidnapping was used as a matter of state control. When the regime fell in 1981, Puccio continued the family business, switching targets to wealthy fam- ilies who were often part of his own family’s social set, holding his captives for ransoming and then killing them after receiving payment. As depicted here, he did so with a sense of entitlement -- he was above the law, and assumed democracy would never last. And indeed, he carried out these activi- ties for several years before he ap- parently became expendable. With good psychological insight, the ilm depicts interlocking circles of cynical control; Puccio’s con- trol of his children and wife (who could not have missed what was going on in their own home--and who were even enlisted to help) operates under the guise of love and close family ties, yet leaves no room for question or negotiation. The day-to-day decisions of his wife and children (and especially his sports-hero son Alejandro) to alternately cooperate and partici- pate and turn a blind eye are a cu- rious combination of manipulated and chosen -- and the ilm offers little glimpses of the broader cir- cles of manipulation and control necessary to enable the police cor- ruption and wealth inequities that were Puccio’s stock in trade. It’s a fascinating window into a notori- ous part of Argentine history, with insights that go beyond its speciic time and place. The ilm plays on Feb. 23 and Feb. 27. Although “The Judgment” feels manipulative in spots, its two lead performances draw you into to the father-son conlict at its center. Mityo is about to lose his house near the Greek-Bulgarian border that he once patrolled as a young soldier in the 1980s. Back then the Soviet agenda was to keep people in -- but now the bor- der issues involve keeping people out. His desperate economic cir- cumstances (the cause of which is revealed in bits and pieces over the course of the ilm) have fed the growing resentment of his teenage son Vasko and drive Mityo to take on work with the same cruel col- onel he served back in the Soviet era and who now cynically smug- gles immigrants from Syria. The immigrants themselves don’t ig- ure much in the story; the focus, rather, is on Mityo’s past, the idea of borders and debts that inally come due, and the fragility of life. The harsh landscape and the re- lationship between the father and son make this story compelling and, in moments, quite moving. The ilm plays again on Feb. 23. Director Patricio Guzman’s approach to documentary ilm- making is quite distinct--medi- tative, grounded in place, poetic, and willing to look deeply. His latest, “The Pearl Button,” car- ries through some of the themes addressed in “Nostalgia for the Light,” which was an examination of the search for meaning in the stars and the search for the dis- appeared in Chile. Using a simi- lar ruminative approach, guided by his calm, deliberate narration, Guzman muses on how Chileans have become so disconnected corridor for weeks awaiting a bed. These all contrast with her affable relationship with a family whose dog eats better than she does and whose matriarch eventually of- fers her enough money to live on for a year to guard the house and make it look lived in while the family lees abroad. The trajectory of this story inds subtle ways to underline how revolution doesn’t necessarily unfreeze longstanding social inequities. The ilm plays again on Feb. 24. “Heavenly Nomadic” offers a simple and atmospheric look into the life of a horse-herding family in the mountains of Kyrgysztsan. ‘The Clan’ tells the story of Argentina’s notorious Puccio family, a Three generations live under cov- hard-hitting crime saga where kidnapping is used as a matter of er of the same yurt -- grandpar- state control. The movie splays again on Feb. 23 and Feb. 27 as ents, mother, and a seven-year-old part of the Portland International Film Festival. daughter -- and all feel the ab- life, with all the humanity of the together, her daily trips to ill jugs sence of the child’s father, son to two men invested in their animal from a communal faucet for her the grandparents, who drowned a charges. We are never told of the grandmother, and her regular trips few years before. The mother does dispute that separates them, but to the hospital where Aly’s father, C ontinued on p Age 20 gradually see differences between sick with cancer, camps out in a the two; one is a hard drinker and a more volatile personality, but the animosity between them is clear- ly shared. When an infection is detected among sheep in the area that requires slaughter of all the local herds, the stubborn broth- ers continue to ight the crisis and each other until a shared objective moves them together. Observant, funny, and at times quite mov- ing, it garnered a top prize at the Egyptian actress Menna Shalabi stars in ‘Nawara,’ a feature ilm that offers a subversive window into post-Mubarak Egypt. from the water that surrounds them (the country has 4,000 miles of coastline), and uses water as his vehicle for exploring the soul depths of the forgotten victims of Chile’s dark colonial past and more recent brutal dictatorship. This isn’t a search for answers as much as a search for questions, sitting with stories of the lost way of life of Chile’s original inhabi- tants, listening to the experienc- es of native peoples in their lan- guages, and also lingering on the sounds and sights of the water that connects past and present togeth- er. It plays again on Feb. 20. “Rams” depicts two sheep-herding brothers in the mountains of Iceland, each lov- ingly tending the sheep in their legacy breed but living adjacent to each other without speaking for 40 years. It’s a stark and lonely Cannes Film Festival. Plays again on Feb. 17. “Nawara” offers a subversive window into post-Mubarak Egypt. Writer-director Hala Khalil builds her story around the title character, a young woman from a poor Cai- ro neighborhood who has worked since childhood for a family who, as part of Mubarak’s power ma- chine, can take their wealth for granted. I’m sure I missed the import of many of the clues in the ilm -- but even from this distance, I appreciated how Khalil illustrat- ed the contrasts in Egyptian soci- ety through details like Nawara’s long commute through Cairo to reach the gated community where the family lives, her ive-year-old marriage to Aly, a Nubian man (from a lower social caste), un- consummated because they can- not afford to set up a household