Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Empire Magazine and iPad
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Two free posters with Empire magazine
Subscribe: Get Dead Island: Riptide
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Your chance to win a Blu-ray every day!
Cannes Film Festival 2013
News, photos and more from the Croisette
Empire Blogs
Words From The Wise

Back to all blogs Comment Now

Festival report: CPH:DOX Part Two

Posted on Tuesday November 13, 2012, 11:53 by Damon Wise in Words From The Wise
Festival report: CPH:DOX Part Two

The interesting thing about the hybridisation of documentaries is that nothing is always what it seems. And just as City World (see last post) suggested something more expansive than a child's-eye view of life, so I Have Always Been A Dreamer, by Sabine Gruffat, led me to expect something smaller than a compare-and-contrast view of two huge cities: Detroit, USA, and Dubai, UAE. Though certainly informative, the film can't help but suffer comparisons with two recent docs on the Motor City – mostly Detropia, by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, and also Julien Temple's BBC film Requiem For Detroit? – while the Dubai section doesn't have as much history to work with. I found my mind wandering a bit, which was also, unfortunately, the case with The Last Station, by Cristian Soto and Catalina Vergara. A very beautifully lit and respectful study of a remote old people's home in Chile, this mosaic piece felt like an Old Master come to life, but, in the context of a busy festival, its near-glacial pace worked against it; I should probably see it again.

From here we go to four films that wilfully mix fact and fiction, starting with Caesar Must Die by the Taviani brothers, a film I first saw in San Sebastian and remains one of my favourite festival experiences of the year. It was interesting to see this film cued up as a doc, because, although it sort of is, I had previously seen it as fiction, which it also sort of is, showing a cast of violent Italian prison inmates acting out their own interpretation of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. The blurring of real life and fantasy is brilliantly balanced here – right up until the end when the slam of a cell door brings the high of this imperfect but emotionally electric performance to a sad, grey end.

A film that seemed to be much more simple and yet proved to be anything but was Searching For Bill by Jonas Poher Rasmussen – the only film I'll be mentioning that wasn't in competition at CPH:DOX. It had a lot going for it, but by the end I felt a little cheated. This is a film that sets itself up in chapters, has myriad characters that all, tacitly, seem to be headed in the same direction (ie, toward the title character Bill, a con artist whose diary is found), but by the end shatters like a shot glass in any number of (unsatisfying) directions. I assumed it was a comment on post-recession America, and there's a lot about it to commend it, but its shaggy-dog storyline is just that, I suspect.

I preferred, but not by a great deal, Roland Hassel by Måns Månsson, the study of a retired detective investigating the assassination of Norwegian prime minister Olof Palme in 1986. Palme's story is fascinating in its own right, leading to some incredible, and certainly plausible conspiracy theories, but this film doesn't really go there, instead telling the true and truly Zodiac-like tale of a man dedicated to history. Local critics thought it could have been better, but I liked Hassel as a character, and though the film's international prospects aren't great, he seemed a good ambassador for Palme's odd story.

And speaking of ambassadors, local hero Mads Brugger – who played The Ambassador in the hilarious yet horrifying Danish exposé of the same name, following the trail of corruption to blood Diamonds in Africa – was on hand on CPH:DOX's closing night to give the festival's main award to The Act Of Killing by Joshua Oppenheimer, the hands-down winner of the main competition. To say this film deserves to be seen is an understatement; there are really few words to describe the images it shows or, more disturbingly, the memories it conjures with. I must admit that I have some issues with the length and structure of the film, but these aren't by any means huge. And I also think that most audiences won't notice either throughout this somewhat jaw-dropping expedition.

As with Brugger's The Ambassador, this film is an intervention of sorts into foreign parts, this time Indonesia, where, in 1965, an attempted coup against the country's authoritarian president resulted in the deaths of half a million “communist” agitators. But as this often spine-chilling film shows, the rules of engagement weren't as simple as state versus enemy: the government drafted in some freelancers – aka gangsters – to help them clear up. In other hands, this film could have been a John Pilger-esque piece about the killing fields of the east, but Oppenheimer has gone for something different. He sees the grotesqueness of this situation and wishes to prod it; as a result, he finds certain gentlemen who were involved in this genocide and invites them to make a movie of it.

But the most shocking part of the story is how amiable those men turn out to be, principally the lovable Anwar Congo, who recalls and shows for us how he invented a new, cleaner way to kill Communists after deciding that beating them to death was messy and inhumane. Congo is a genuinely ambiguous “hero” (in the narrative term); much less the others. One lobbies for election while boasting about how he'll cream money from his constituents on breaches of planning permissions, another constantly snipes at the others – on camera – about how the film will sully their “noble” cause. And he's right: everybody on camera in this film reveals a shocking side of their society, from the journalist who claims he saw nothing, to the politician that let it all happen, not to mention the village voters who scorn any candidate that hasn't brought them “gifts”.

The groundswell on this film is quite small at the moment, but its legend is sure to grow, since The Act Of Killing doesn't just tell a story, it dramatises it too – in ways you wouldn't believe, with sequences involving dancing girls, lilting Tiki-style muzak, cheesy amateur gore effects and lumpen re-enactments that look like mid-80s Australian soap opera visions of GoodFellas, but much, much cheaper. The whole is a nightmare where, for the viewer, civilisation seems to disintegrate – which, in a sense, is what so horrifically happened in 1965. “I have not seen a film as powerful, surreal, and frightening in at least a decade,” says executive producer Werner Herzog, who knows insanity when he sees it. He's right. Oppenheimer's film recalls Apocalypse Now. Except this time for real.

Login or register to comment.

Currently No Comments

Log in below, or register to post comments
Username:
Password:
Remember Me:

CATEGORIES

Empire States (412)

Under The Radar (289)

Infinite Lives (75)

Small Screen (53)

Cannes 2011 (28)

Off The Wire (23)

Comic-Con 2010 (21)

Words From The Wise (11)

Casting Couch (2)

Oscars 2011 (1)


RECENT POSTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
By Stephen Carty

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
By Olly Richards

Arrow: The Pilot
By Stephen Carty

TV Review: Homeland Episode 1
By Stephen Carty

Empire Visits Fresh Meat Season 2
By Phil de Semlyen

Does Elementary Cut The Mustard?
By Stephen Carty

Dallas: Changing Of The Guard
By Stephen Carty

The Newsroom: First Reaction
By Stephen Carty

House: The Final Finale
By Stephen Carty

True Blood: Season Four - What A Witch
By Helen O'Hara


RECENT COMMENTS

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed thought the show was absolutely terrific, looking forward to the next few episodes and seeing"  TheDavidFoster
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I think you need to go a bit easier on the movies Hannibal and Red Dragon. Individually they are bot"  danielthompson99
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I've been loving it so far but apparently NBC are already having the jitters having already moved th"  kisswithatear
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"I love it so far. I agree that it should have been a Showtime or HBO tv show because there's more ro"  thisiscarlijn
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Didn't even want to watch this show initially. A friend talked me into watching the premiere episode"  readyrr
Read comment

Hannibal: The Pilot Review
"Agreed. Best new show I have see for a while. Totally destroys the god-awful The Following (not hard"  Youshouldberunning
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"@lankeymarlon, it is in fact possible to access the US Netflix selection in the UK if you are watchi"  Craigmustdie
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Amazing show, really on a different intellectual level to most things on tv. Mostly avoids using the"  Zimbo
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"Watched the whole series and its been excellent. Its the kind of role Kevin Spacey was born to play "  Popcorn Required
Read comment

House Of Cards: Our First Reaction
"I'm 6 episodes in too and this is an impressive start for Netflix as a specially commissioned series"  Brother L
Read comment


POPULAR POSTS

What's The Best TV Show Ever?
307 comments

We Don't Need Another Heroes
122 comments

Lost: The End
112 comments

What's The Best Show On TV Right Now?
104 comments

The Show Must Go On
102 comments

Smallville: The End Is Upon Us
63 comments

Ten Ways To Improve 24
58 comments

Why The US Office Is Undeniably Better Than The Original
57 comments

My Problems With Sherlock
49 comments

Sherlock Holmes And The Curious Case Of The Princess Bride
43 comments


BLOGGERS
Damon Wise (273)
Helen O'Hara (156)
James Dyer (85)
Chris Hewitt (83)
Amar Vijay (71)
Ali Plumb (50)
David Scarborough (38)
Sam Toy (34)
Sam Toy (31)
Stephen Carty (31)
James White (27)
Simon Braund (24)
Olly Richards (23)
Ian Freer (21)
Nick de Semlyen (20)
Phil de Semlyen (18)
Nev Pierce (10)
Glen Ferris (8)
Dan Jolin (8)
Nick de Semlyen (8)
Owen Williams (8)
Peter Lord (6)
Emily Phillips (6)
Kat Brown (3)
Dan Goodswen (3)
Kim Newman (3)
Jodie McEwan (3)
Empire Empire (2)
Sebastian Williamson (2)
Eve Barlow (2)
Emma Cochrane (2)
Edmund Ward (1)
Chris Smith (1)
Alice Wybrew (1)
Jonny Pile (1)
Steve Charnock (1)
Empire Workie (1)
Colin Kennedy (1)
Tom Ambrose (1)
Lucy Quick (1)
Benjamin Lee (1)
David Parkinson (1)
Dallas King (1)
Ross Bennett (1)
John Hitchcox (1)
Siam Goorwich (1)
Sanam Jehanfard (1)
Anton Bitel (1)


CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
Cannes Film Festival Videblogisode #3
Featuring Justin Timberlake, Marion Cotillard, Clive Owen and Carey Mulligan!

The Biggest Doctor Who Jaw-Droppers
The Time Lord's biggest surprises over 50 years of TV

Quicksilver & Scarlet Witch: A Beginner's Guide To The Avengers 2 Newcomers
Your primer on the brother and sister joining the A-team

Clint Mansell On Making Requiem For A Dream
'Darren had to edit at night because he could get access to the studio for free then.'

Arrested Development Video Interviews
Say hello to Jeffrey Tambor, David Cross, Tony Hale, Michael Cera and Alia Shawkat

Empire's Favourite Music Moments
From The Pixies to Burt Bacharach via Audioslave

The 20 Soundtracks That Defined The 2000s
The sounds of a dark knight, a mischievous Parisian, a troubled family and one flying house...

Subscribe For Only £20
Get Dead Island: Riptide and six issues of Empire for only £20! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY