A copy of yesterday's Sydney Film Festival 2010 posting for Empire Australasia features below...
11 June 2010
SFF 2010: DAY 8
Make your vote count!
Make your vote count!
Given the canine flavour of this year’s Sydney Film Festival publicity
blitz, you’d be forgiven for thinking the phrase ‘Best in Show’ would
best sum up the Showtime Audience Awards.
The awards – the sole winner of which is announced next week, after the
festival closes – gives punters the opportunity to voice their opinions
on the film that has stood head and shoulders above the rest over the
12-day period.
Last year’s winner, The Cove,
famously went on to nab the Oscar for Best Documentary so, as the
festival likes to put it, “Sydney filmgoers vote smartly”. Any film can
be nominated from the 157 that feature in this year’s program, and votes
are simply cast on forms that are handed out prior to each screening by
SFF staff (and returned, after each screening, of course).
This
year’s most likely contender could well be Lucy Walker’s very engaging
documentary, Waste Land, which screens again tonight, at Dendy Opera
Quays. The film examines the community of recyclers that lives and works
in the world’s largest landfill site, in Brazil. Numbering close to
3000, the ‘pickers’ as they’re known have fought for government
acknowledgement, workers’ rights and more – and have won.
Waste Land
goes further than merely profiling key members of this unique village,
though: it follows celebrated artist Vik Muniz as he assembles said
members for an art-for-action plan. The final portraits, composed of
recycled materials from the landfill and put together by the pickers
themselves, go to auction in London – and prove to be the hottest items
for sale.
Walker, who’s giving a just-announced
talk this afternoon for film fans in the State Theatre’s Statement
Lounge and features on this year’s Official Competition jury, says the
experience is something she’ll never forget. Although she admits the
stench was almost more than she could take.
“That’s the one thing you don’t get from seeing the
film!” she says. “It was worse than you can possibly imagine. But the
people – they are amazing. The one line I love more than any other in
the film is that ‘99 is not 100’. It reminds you that every Coke can,
every sheet of paper – it all makes a difference.”
Walker’s already busy with another project – she
premiered her new documentary Countdown
to Zero, about the nuclear arms race, at Cannes last month – but
still hopes Waste Land can nab
the Audience gong next week. “The film’s won the audience award at every
festival it’s screened at, which is amazing,” she says. “So yes, I am
hoping it will win in Sydney, too!”
(Art has
featured significantly in this year’s festival program, with Tamra
Davis’ moving document on street artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, The Radiant Child, screening earlier
this week -- the film had its Australian premiere last Saturday, at
Event Cinemas George Street.)
Another jury
member in town for this year’s Official Competition, Yonfan’s lush Prince of Tears tells of a dark
fairytale of another kind, involving brutal government suppression and
family tragedy. Prince of Tears (pictured, above), which features the director’s own
production design, screens again on Monday, at the State Theatre. As for
which film Yonfan will nominate in his role as juror, he admits to
feeling conflicted when asked to judge one film over another. “These
films are art,” he explains. “It’s very hard to judge one piece of art
over another. It’s not a game of sport, where there can only be one
clear winner. So I’m not looking forward to having to vote at all!”
Waste Land
screens tonight at 6.45pm, at Dendy Opera Quays
Prince of Tears
screens Monday 14 June at 2.30pm, at the State Theatre
The Showtime Audience Awards will be announced next
week, after June 14
Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child is due for release
later in the year
ED GIBBS
FOUR LIONS: THE CHRIS MORRIS INTERVIEW
IF A COMEDY ABOUT MUSLIM EXTREMISTS sounds absurd, even twisted -- and almost certain to lead to career suicide for its creator -- imagine an even weirder scenario: the film’s premiere coinciding with a UK terror alert that reads ‘Severe’.
Such a bizarre coincidence would be unsettling for any
first-time filmmaker, particularly one who’s showcasing their work at America’s
leading independent film event. All, that is, except one.
As the man in question, satirist turned writer-director
Chris Morris, explains, the audience at this year’s Sundance Film Festival
premiere of Four Lions “got it”, cheering on his wickedly funny film long after
the credits had rolled.
“In London, there’s still a diffuse response to the 7/7
attacks,” he says, referring to the London Underground bombings of July 2005, which
claimed the lives of 52 commuters. “Whereas the Americans came to it with less
baggage. To an extent, 9/11 is that much dimmer in people’s minds.”
Morris, a one-time contemporary of fellow comic-turned-movie
man Steve Coogan, is renowned in his native England for outrageous, Chaser-like
stunts. With the likes of TV’s Brass Eye and The Day Today (and Blue Jam, on
BBC radio), he’s targeted politicians and celebrities, duping them into
commenting on fictitious drugs (‘cake’) and Morris-concocted ‘news’ on the seemingly
ultimate taboo, paedophilia.
Such pranks have seen him lynched
in the British press -- but he had no qualms about treating his latest, thorny
subject with similarly perverse humour (“There needs to be a perspective,” he
says). And having spent four years exhaustively researching and interviewing
for Four Lions, he’s at pains to points out that the idea of would-be bombers
as bumbling fools couldn’t be more real.
“Surveillance transcripts reveal that their conversation is
utterly ridiculous,” he says, of the UK’s covert tracking of suspect
terrorists. “They talk about last night’s TV, the latest gadget they’ve got,
whether one of them really looks like Frodo (after a girl said he did). Then
suddenly it’s, ‘Oh, by the way, should we blow up a nightclub?’
“It’s very fractured,” he adds. “These lads are not in
Chechnya, they’re just a bunch of lads in the north of England, acting like
lads do. It’s their plan that is potentially lethal.”
While the absurdity of the self-proclaimed ‘Lions’ may be
inspired by real-life events – the bombers spend much of the film bickering
over what constitutes martyrdom, what they should blow up and what they should
say in their official ‘video message’ – their ultimate target, the London
Marathon, was one that Morris himself thought up.
“The marathon seems like a sort of plausible option,” Morris
reasons. “But you do wonder if the more farcical stories are true. There was a
man who shoved some explosives up his arse in the Middle East. He ran into the
room, shouted ‘God is great’ – in Jordan, I think it was – and his arse
exploded. And the King walks out unscathed. And you think, ‘Did that really
happen?’
As Morris found, though, such laughably inept scenarios
(“There was a guy who accidentally blew his balls off over Christmas,” he adds,
only half-seriously) are just the tip of the iceberg. What surprises most about
his film, in fact, is the audience’s inadvertent attachment to his characters: while
it’s kitchen-sink drama meets slapstick, the film eventually plays out like a
poignant comedy of errors. And, interestingly, the security forces don’t come
off that much better than the terrorists.
ED GIBBS




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