Monthly Archives: May 2016

  • Rome, Open City

    Roma città aperta

    Roberto Rossellini (1945)

    My recent introduction to Rossellini through Stromboli had slightly prejudiced me against Rome, Open City.  Geoffrey Nowell-Smith’s smugly omniscient, leisurely introduction to the proceedings at BFI strengthened the prejudice.   So I was primed in the early stages of the film to discern the seeds of Stromboli – a juxtaposition of documentary and melodrama, and a failure to marry them.   I was ready to acknowledge Open City’s place in history as a catalyst for Italian neo-realist cinema – but with a condescending expectation that I would see it as having paved the way for better pictures like Bicycle Thieves.    By the end of its 101 minutes, I felt very differently – and contrite (though not towards Geoffrey Nowell-Smith).  Roberto Rossellini succeeds magnificently in forging a unity of conventional dramatic and documentary elements.

    Rome, Open City deals with events in the city during the Nazi occupation in 1943-44.  The legend at the start indicates that the characters are fictional but based on real-life heroes of the Italian resistance.   I think the moment when my feelings about the film were transformed came when Anna Magnani – as Pina, a young woman whose wedding has been interrupted by the arrival of the Germans – fights off a couple of Nazi soldiers and runs down the street (at terrific speed) in frantic pursuit of the truck that’s carrying her fiancé Francesco and other men away.   Pina is shot and falls to the ground, her young son Marcello screams ‘Mamma!’ and we soon realise that she is dead.   Seeing her in Open City certainly makes you understand Magnani’s reputation as a force-of-nature performer and she’s marvellous throughout in making Pina both real and vivid.  When she struggles free of the soldiers, you can believe it as a physical possibility for this particular woman (especially with the sprint that follows) – but you also experience the moment as the feat of a screen heroine and register it, in that respect, as not part of real life.   So when Pina is killed, it’s not only that terminating her existence has a more intense impact because of Magnani’s life force; the death also upsets your assumption that the star performer will survive.  (This may not have been much of a factor at the time – at least for non-Italian audiences:  one of the interesting points made by Nowell-Smith was that, whereas Magnani and Aldo Fabrizi were familiar screen faces in Italy, they were unknown outside – to the extent that many took them for non-professionals, as some of the cast really were.)   At this point, the realistic visual style and the Roman street locations deployed by Rossellini overwhelm the dramatically conventional details.  You realise the events on screen are, to all intents and purposes, actual events.  The effect is to eliminate the safe distance between you and what you’re seeing.

    It’s an effect which is sustained through to – and especially in the climax of – Open City.  The Communist Giorgio Manfredi is interrogated and, refusing to speak, is tortured by the Nazis.  The priest Don Pietro is questioned as the torture of Manfredi continues, and also gives nothing away.  Manfredi dies of his injuries without having broken his silence.  Don Pietro is shot the next day by firing squad.   Here the realistic approach (even though the interior scenes were shot in a studio) has an extraordinary force.  Marcello Pagliero, as Manfredi, expresses, from the start, an interior strength which is all the more powerful because it’s undemonstrative.  So his screams during the torture – which hardly sound human until they’re muted by the smaller noises Manfredi then makes in order to control his bellowing – are well nigh unbearable, not only because of what is being done to him but because of the contrast between these terrible cries and Manfredi’s quiet nobility.  Rossellini’s direction is sensitive and uncompromising:  he shows us the physical consequences of the torture more than its infliction – and that, in the intervals between one assault on him and the next, Manfredi is still and determined.  At the same time, we see Don Pietro hearing (and eventually seeing) what’s going on.  I can’t remember seeing a crisis of conscience dramatised in quite this way.   The character of the priest is developed with great skill in the course of the film – in both the writing and Aldo Fabrizi’s performance.  When we first see Don Pietro, his profession, his physique and Fabrizi’s face all combine to suggest a comic character, and to reassure us that nothing too bad is likely to befall a bumblingly decent, slightly ridiculous man of God.  It’s the intervening details that gradually reveal Don Pietro’s moral substance and courage, and which help to make him, like Manfredi, such a compelling and convincing hero.

    Magnani, Pagliero and Fabrizi are all wonderfully believable; so too is the gently but powerfully expressive Francesco Grandjacquet as Francesco, especially in his scenes with the lovely and funny child Marcello (Vito Annicchiarico).  Compared with all these, the main Germans, the Gestapo chief Major Bergmann and his sidekick Ingrid, seem caricatures – early examples (at least in European cinema?) of Nazi characters whose sexual deviance is supposed to reflect their moral bestiality.  This convention can be entertaining to watch but it rarely bears thinking about, since it manages to demonise homosexuality and to trivialise Nazism – as little more than ‘kinky’ – at the same time.  It’s more than usually palatable here for two reasons.  First, the proximity of the making of Open City to the events it describes – the Allies forced the Germans to evacuate Rome in June 1944 and shooting of the film began in January 1945 – left very little time for Rossellini and those he worked with to get any kind of distance from the material; part of the greatness of the film is in that lack of distance.  It’s miraculous that the figures in the Italian resistance that Rossellini wanted to commemorate are realised as credibly as they are – and completely understandable that some kind of filter was needed in recreating the Nazis. Second, while Giovanna Galletti (Ingrid) has hooded eyes, heavy make-up and prowling movements which add up to a conventional 1940s lesbian stereotype (she looks like a man in drag), Harry Feist as Bergmann gives one of the most thoroughly camp characterisations I’ve ever seen – to an extent that makes Bergmann much more viciously individual than Rossellini may have intended.

    Although he said things to annoy, Geoffrey Nowell-Smith did have plenty of interest to tell us – including a summary of the different kinds of success Open City enjoyed in different parts of the world.   It’s no surprise that it was a big box-office hit in Italy.  Apart from the fact that Hollywood imports had still not resumed at the time, the film is a celebration not just of particular heroes but of the people of Rome and of the city itself and its ways of life (including its churches). There are some ardently patriotic passages of dialogue – couched in terms of the underdog Italians demonstrating indomitability and overturning the Nazis’ herrenvolk assumptions.

    The cast also includes Maria Michi, whose acting is relatively conventional in the part of Manfredi’s former girlfriend seduced by Ingrid into betraying her fellow resistance workers; Carla Rovere, more distinctive as Pina’s sister; and the impressive Joop van Hulzen, as a German officer who, in his cups, calmly and coldly foretells the demise of the Third Reich.  The screenplay was written by Sergio Amidei and Federico Fellini (as far as I can see, his first screen credit), the music by Rossellini’s brother Renzo.

    16 February 2009

     

  • Mustang

    Deniz Gamze Ergüven (2015)

    In the opening scene of Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s debut feature, a scrum of adolescent girls and boys, on the last day of the school term, bid farewell to their teacher, who is moving from the rural coastal area where Mustang is mostly set to Istanbul.  The schoolgirls include five sisters.  The youngest of them, Lale (Güneş Şensoy), is in tears about the departure of the teacher Dilek (Bahar Kerimoglu).  Her elder sisters make affectionate fun of Lale.  In the film’s final sequence, Lale arrives at a house in Istanbul with the next youngest sister, Nur (Doğa Doğuşlu).  A man opens the door and Lale asks for Dilek.  The latter is surprised to see Lale but, when the girl hugs her and doesn’t let go, Dilek returns the embrace.  A lot has happened in Lale’s family since she last saw her former teacher.

    Before that first school scene, there’s a very brief voiceover from Lale.  ‘One moment we were fine,’ she says, ‘then everything turned to shit’.  That turning point occurs as soon as the sisters are home from school.  It’s a lovely, sunny day and, rather than taking the bus, the girls head home along the beach with a group of the boys.  Things get boisterous:  the girls sit on the boys’ shoulders and try to knock each other off into the water.  The juxtaposition of these early sequences is metaphorically apt – the end of school, the start of girls and boys spending free time together – and the first example of one of Mustang‘s repeated, if not consistent, strengths:  Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s ability to invest and animate symbolically significant moments in the story with a vivid reality.  As soon as the girls get back home, they’re fiercely rebuked by their grandmother (Nihal Koldaş).  The mucking about with the boys – witnessed by others in the local community – is judged to be not horseplay but whores’ play, and the girls’ school days are literally over.  The head of the household, their uncle Erol (Ayberk Pekcan)[1], is so appalled by their behaviour that he refuses to let his nieces continue to leave the house even to attend school.  Instead, they are taught housekeeping skills by their grandmother and other female relatives.

    Ergüven’s fusion of the real and the morally exemplary is a rare happy marriage in Mustang.  The plot is driven by the attempts made to marry off the sisters, in turn, to men deemed by the family elders to be suitable husbands.  Strong-willed Sonay (İlayda Akdoğan), the eldest girl, already has a boyfriend and succeeds in marrying him.  The second sister, Selma (Tuğba Sunguroğlu), is saddled with Osman (Erol Afşin):  on their wedding night, she fails to bleed and is immediately marched by her scandalised in-laws to hospital, where a doctor examines Selma and confirms that the hymen remains intact.  (Selma’s conversation with the doctor makes a strong impression through being played so matter-of-factly.)  As her marriage approaches, the behaviour of the middle sister, Ece (Elit İşcan), becomes increasingly erratic.  She commits suicide.  Nur’s wedding ceremony is about to get underway when the determined Lale launches her escape plan.  This moment too has both a metaphorical charge and a dynamic reality.  The uncle has built fortifications to the family home, to make it literally more difficult for the girls to get out.  The traditional start of the wedding ceremony, as described in earlier examples in the film, is for the groom and his family to seek admittance to the bride’s home; part of this ritual involves brief, light-hearted ‘playing hard to get’ on the part of the bride.  Lale and Nur do just that:  they trick their uncle and grandmother into stepping outside when the groom’s party arrives then lock the door.  They shut the wedding party out of their own prison before getting out of it through an unfortified part of the house.

    Lale has been increasingly horrified to watch her elder sisters’ marriages being arranged and to feel the religious and social traditions of the community gather incarcerating force.   She is at the centre of other excursions from the family home before her and Nur’s climactic escape.  The first of these makes for an audience-pleasing highlight of Mustang which strains credibility, to put it mildly.  The final of a football competition is taking place.  Because male fans misbehaved at a previous match, they’ve been banned from attending the final and the crowd is women-only.  Among the sisters, Lale in particular loves football but isn’t allowed by her uncle even to watch it on television.   She learns that other girls from the village are going to the final and persuades her sisters they should go too.  They get out of the house, miss the bus and persuade a truck driver to give them a lift.   Uncle Erol and his friends are just about to settle down to watch the match at home when the grandmother catches sight of the girls on the television screen, enjoying themselves in no uncertain terms.  She and the other men’s female relatives take instant, resourceful action to cut the village’s electricity supply.  This girls-just-wanna-have-fun episode provides a couple of nice visual jokes but makes no realistic sense.  It’s inconceivable – for reasons both cultural and economic – that attendance at a big (televised) soccer match, and not just a Turkish one, would be restricted to women.  (This is such a basic nonsense that it’s not worth going into the subsidiary improbabilities of the occasion.)

    Lale next meets the truck driver Yasin (Burak Yigit) when she’s left home to embark on a solo walk to Istanbul, which is hundreds of miles away.  Yasin is amused by Lale’s ridiculous idea yet struck by the seriousness of her intent.  They meet again and he shows her how to drive.  When she and Nur eventually escape from the fortress, they make their immediate getaway in their uncle’s car, with Lale at the wheel.  They go only a little way in the hope that Yasin, whom Lale has tried to contact, will pick them up and take them all the way to Istanbul.  Yasin is a somewhat idealised figure – a chevalier who ends up as the US cavalry, marked out as different from the other local men by his long hair.  (When Lale is trying to contact him to help her and Nur escape, she first phones a man she hopes is his employer and describes Yasin to him as having long hair.  The voice on the line says he can’t help:  he doesn’t have ‘any queer’ employees.)  In spite of the contrived plotting around Yasin, the exchanges between him and Lale are attentively written and nicely played.  As the five sisters get out of the truck when he gives them a lift to the football match, it’s Lale who sincerely thanks Yasin – a small but noticeable detail that sows the seed of her subsequent interactions with and reliance on him.   He derides her crummy footwear when she’s setting off on the walk to Istanbul; the next time they meet, she’s got hold of a pair of red shoes from one of her elder sisters.  The fairytale aspect of the story makes it hard not to see the shoes as ruby slippers.

    Mustang has won various prizes and was Oscar-nominated earlier this year for Best Foreign Language Film.  It’s also been received with enthusiasm by most critics but not by Nick Pinkerton in Sight & Sound (June 2016).  Pinkerton sees the film, ‘with its one-dimensional figures of conservative authority, [as] too narrowly Manichean to allow the troubling ambivalence of multiple perspectives’.  He finds the ‘sense of slow smothering … expressed in only the most literal-minded visual terms …there is none of the feeling of mounting cabin fever that might lend terrible immediacy to the offscreen suicide of one of the sisters, precipitated by sexual abuse within the protective walls of home’.  Of course Deniz Gamze Ergüven and Alice Winocour, with whom she wrote the screenplay, consider the world view of the grandmother and uncle benighted but the playing of Nihal Koldaş and Ayberk Pekcan (the chauffeur in Winter Sleep) makes their characters more than one-dimensional.  Koldaş’s grandmother is an anxiously caring woman; there’s a fine moment when, as they fold laundry, she assures one of the girls that it’s possible to learn to love the husband you’ve been assigned – the grandmother knows this from personal experience.   Uncle Erol is irascible at best but Pekcan doesn’t play him as overtly tyrannical:  it’s the normality of the man that makes Erol’s abuse of his nieces, in more ways than one, so alarming.  The extra dimensions the actors create make the uncle’s and grandmother’s attitudes no more palatable but Nick Pinkerton is wrong to blame this effect on tendentious over-simplifying.  How can a film-maker nuance such attitudes?  The offscreen suicide – signalled by a gunshot – is too obviously designed to shock but Pinkerton’s complaint of a lack of ‘feeling of mounting cabin fever’ is puzzling.  The atmosphere that Ergüven builds within the house is a potent, uneasy mix of stir-craziness and torpor.  The girls are like zoo animals, listless yet restless.

    In a generally excellent cast, fourteen-year-old Güneş Şensoy is especially good.  Under Ergüven’s skilful direction, Şensoy gives Lale a porous intelligence; her observant quality develops into urgent watchfulness.  Her intense enjoyment of the driving lesson with Yasin is lovely.  Warren Ellis’s music is supple and well used.  For example, when Lal is making her getaway with Nur, the score suggests the girls’ desire to leave home with a hint of regret that they have no other option; as they then wait in the dark at the roadside, Lale is so focused on wanting Yasin’s truck to appear, there’s no scope for mixed feelings and no music on the soundtrack.  The escape-to-freedom ending is conventional but this hardly detracts from what Deniz Gamze Ergüven has achieved in Mustang.  It’s a distinctive and very appealing film.

    13 May 2016

    [1] If there’s an explanation of what happened to the girls’ parents, I missed it.

     

Posts navigation