Sunday 21 February 2016

Weary Berlin crowd cheers 8-hour ‘Lullaby’ – Historical drama tackles Philippine revolution

BERLIN, Feb 19, (Agencies): Hundreds of movie lovers emerged bleary-eyed but enthusiastic Thursday after the longest competition contender in the 66-year history of the Berlin Film Festival, shown in an eight-and-a-half hour marathon screening with just one break.

Daring Filipino director Lav Diaz had told AFP before travelling to the German capital that his historical epic “A Lullaby to the Sorrowful Mystery” would be a “struggle” for the audience.

But as the curtain closed at the 1,600-seat Berlinale Palace theatre, more than half the audience was still present and rewarded the 57-year-old filmmaker with warm applause and cries of “bravo”.

The ambitious film is one of 18 films vying for the festival’s Golden Bear top prize, to be awarded by jury president Meryl Streep Saturday.

Streep and her seven-member panel including British actor Clive Owen attended the sole screening of the film, which was sold out and packed to the rafters Thursday morning.

Security staff confiscated water bottles and required audience members to check their bags before they immersed themselves in the rich revolutionary history and mythology of Diaz’s impoverished homeland.

Some audience members were toting inflatable pillows and smuggled in granola bars as they entered the cinema, shaking hands in solidarity with their seat mates before the screening began.

Gerhard Reda, a German amateur filmmaker who says he watches 10 to 15 movies each week, called the screening a “personal test of courage”.

He said he had started to watch another of Diaz’s notoriously lengthy films last year but had to give up after an hour.

“He can have a 45-minute scene that just has people talking or walking through a field,” he warned.

“Some love him, some hate him but he’s always a challenge.”

About an hour in, the 44-year-old quietly rolled a cigarette while still in his seat so he wouldn’t miss too much when he popped out for a smoke.

As the lights came up Thursday night, Taiwanese film critic Yun-hua Chen said that she was “doing absolutely fine”.

“It was an amazing experience — totally worth it,” she said.

Submerge

“The film really needed to be this long so the audience can submerge in the story.”

Enrico Cehovin, a 27-year-old Italian, said that playing long video games had prepared him for the experience, which he admitted was “only for cinema lovers”.

“Some games take eight to 10 hours to play and you don’t even understand where the time has gone — they can be like long movies,” he said.

“But this was an experience unlike any I’ll have again.”

Development worker Carla Schraml, 36, admitted she did not know much about the Philippines’ revolution going into the film.

“Despite its length, I wish I had learned more,” she said, criticising a meandering story that was only partly accessible for an uninitiated audience.

But Hubert Speich, a critic for German public broadcaster SWR, called the picture “superb”.

“Diaz has his own signature poetic style and the images are just sublime,” he enthused.

“He needs a canvas this size to tell the story he wants to tell in all its complexity — in its historical sweep there is not a single shot that is excessive.

“Diaz shows what cinema is capable of.”

Meanwhile, Filipino director Lav Diaz says movies should not be judged by their length, so he gave the Berlin Film Festival a historical drama about the Philippines that runs more than eight hours.

At a post-screening news conference Diaz rejected being labelled as a creator of “slow cinema”.

“We’re labeled ‘the slow cinema’ but it’s not slow cinema, it’s cinema,” he said.

“I don’t know why … every time we discourse on cinema we always focus on the length.

“It’s cinema, it’s just like poetry, just like music, just like painting where it’s free, whether it’s a small canvas or it’s a big canvas, it’s the same … So cinema shouldn’t be imposed on.”

Diaz’s movie is set in the late 19th century at the period of the Philippine revolution against Spanish rule and focuses on the influence of Andres Bonifacio y de Castro, considered to be one of the main motivators of the uprising.

The film follows the lives of several groups of people, including Castro’s wife who is searching for his body on a mountain that is inhabited by people from the spirit world.

It also follows the lives of several young men who get caught up in the revolution, including the poet Isagani (John Lloyd Cruz), who is so overwhelmed by the bloodshed that he loses faith in his ability to write poems.

Producer Bianca Balbuena praised the Berlinale for allowing the film to be shown in competition for the main prize despite its length.

“The Berlinale gave us the freedom, they didn’t ask us to cut down the length of the film,” she said, adding: “Thank you, Berlin.”

The film is among 19 competing for the top Golden Bear prize to be awarded on Saturday.

Resource: http://www.arabtimesonline.com

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