Monthly Archives: November 2020

  • Luxor

    Zeina Durra (2020)

    Hana (Andrea Riseborough), a British doctor, arrives in Luxor for a break between stints in her international aid work.  She’s recently been on the Lebanon-Syria border; her next assignment could be in Yemen.  She books into the Winter Palace hotel.  The first night she’s there, Carl (Michael Landes), a boring, brazen American tourist, tries to chat her up in the bar, and succeeds in getting her in his bed.  She quietly escapes from his room next morning and takes care to avoid him thereafter.  Hana, who has been in Luxor before, spends the first part of her stay mostly alone.  Drifting round the place and its ancient monuments, she appears to be going through the tourist motions.  At the same time, as she runs her fingers over hieroglyphics on a temple wall, she seems to be trying to rediscover something.  On a boat trip, Hana bumps into Sultan (Karim Saleh), an old flame, and they start spending time together.

    As soon as she sits down in her room on arrival at the Winter Palace, Hana looks weary and defeated.  (You suspect she sleeps with Carl because she hasn’t the energy to refuse.)  Although reticent about her work, she says enough in the course of Luxor to make clear that experiences in the field are the main cause of her exhaustion.  She tells Sultan she’s seen things no one should have to see.  Yet she also asks her ex-lover if he doesn’t miss ‘how hopeful we were’.  The heedlessness of youth that she regrets is something Sultan (who, like Hana, is about forty) seems to have retained rather more of, evidenced in occasional displays of extrovert humour.  His nostalgia – or preparation for nostalgia – is simpler, too, as he waxes lyrical about the faded grandeur of the Winter Palace and ruefully anticipates a forthcoming refurb.  Hana’s only burst of extroversion comes in the hotel bar, where she and Sultan have been drinking.  The lounge pianist plays a number that launches her into an almost frenzied solo dance.  Afterwards, for the only time in the film, she collapses in tears as Sultan guides her back to her room.

    Hana and Sultan are nicely contrasted revenants to Luxor, and the two actors’ physical qualities reinforce the contrast.  Sultan is a westernised Egyptian – an archaeologist now based in America who regularly returns to his native land on excavations there.  Swarthy, strong-featured Karim Saleh gives a good sense of a man comfortable in his own skin and genially shallow until the continuing company of Hana nudges him towards recognising her deeper feelings and becoming himself more reflective.  Andrea Riseborough, with her pale hair and eyes and limber slenderness, is a foreign body in the heat and dust of Luxor, as well as ill at ease with herself.

    While Sultan is cheerfully disengaged from the religious traditions of the culture he grew up in, Hana’s attitude towards the metaphysical is more volatile and hard to get a handle on.  After coming to the aid of a woman tourist who faints in the heat, Hana is accosted by the leader of the woman’s party, who has a determinedly spiritual agenda for their time in Egypt.  Hana finds this alienating but is more responsive to Salima (Salima Ikram), a senior archaeologist on Sultan’s dig, when she asserts that places of great antiquity can be imbued with the intensity of human feeling invested in them over many centuries.  Later, though, as Hana and Sultan dine with the other archaeologists, her mood plummets as Salina describes an unusually plausible case of alleged reincarnation.  It may well be this is an attack of the PTSD from which Hana seems to be suffering but the coincidence of dismay and more-things-in-heaven-and-earth talk is striking.

    Hana herself isn’t averse to gnomic spiritual insights, however.  She announces that the more unstable things are, the more the supernatural comes to the fore:  it’s frustrating that her interlocutor doesn’t ask what she means.  When she says to Sultan, ‘I’ve heard this thing:  the old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born – now is the time of monsters’, he asks whose words these are but Hana laughs that she’s forgotten.  (They were Gramsci’s and have added relevance if you watch Luxor, as I did, in between reading news reports of Trump’s law suits in the light of the US presidential election.)   In the closing stages of the film, the hotel manager Dunia (Shirin Redha), who likes Hana and realises she’s struggling, takes her to see a wise woman.  This old lady says prayers, feels Hana’s hat and withdraws to intuit what her visitor needs to know – Dunia warns that the wait for this could take all night.  Hana falls asleep and has one of those dreams, more common on screen than in life, in which significant details of recent experience are woven into an elegantly suggestive whole.  While she’s sleeping, the shaman briefly reappears but Hana and Dunia leave without, it seems, further conversation with the old woman.  On the journey back to Luxor, their car gets a flat tyre.  While the chauffeur changes it, Hana stands at the roadside looking into the beautifully uncommunicative sky of stars.

    Writer-director Zeina Durra, now in her mid-forties, was born in London to a Bosnian-Palestinian mother and a Jordanian-Lebanese father.  This is her second feature, ten years after the first (The Imperialists Are Still Alive!, a romantic drama set in Manhattan but chiefly concerned with Middle East politics).  Durra, with her cinematographer, Zelma Gainza, has made a film that’s visually and atmospherically strong.  Andrea Riseborough’s thoughtful yet dissociated presence gives Luxor an individuality that ensures it comes over as a character rather than a case study.  But it’s one that doesn’t develop much.  Durra divides the narrative into chapters, with headings that name-check an eclectic collection of people (Freud, The Grateful Dead, Bob Marley) yet the film’s parts don’t amount to much more than a series of illustrations of how Hana is feeling.

    When Sultan first sees her on the boat, he asks Hana what she’s doing in Luxor.  She answers, ‘I’m on a date’ and, when he looks puzzled, laughs embarrassedly, ‘I mean I’m on leave’.  The Freudian slip is revealing of more than how Hana still feels about Sultan (she later admits to dreading seeing him, on Facebook, ‘on a beach, in Dubai, with kids’).  It also reflects the viewer’s primary means of staying engaged with Durra’s film.  By the time she meets Sultan, it’s already pretty clear that Hana’s solitary walks around the ruins will, in terms of what’s going on inside her head, be an unresolved mystery tour.  Hopes are therefore pinned on her love life to maintain interest in the story.  It takes time for Hana and Sultan to have sex together again; his disappearance for most of the last part of Luxor makes you wonder if it will end simply with Hana checking out of the Winter Palace, as it began with her checking in.  She does, indeed, leave the hotel but doesn’t head for the airport.  Her taxi takes Hana instead to the modest place where Sultan is staying.

    The leader of the party including the fainting woman urged Hana to accompany them on their trip to the town of Abydos, stressing the spiritual power of the place.  Hana declined the offer, of course.  Later, she claims not to remember going to Abydos with Sultan when they were lovers years ago.  At the last, she changes her mind about the place.  When Sultan says, ‘Let’s go to Abydos’, she replies, ‘That’s just what I was thinking’.  This is Luxor‘s closing line and its closing shot is an image of what is presumably Abydos.  Durra has told the Arab Times that her film ‘is about [Hana], and it’s about [Sultan] creating this opportunity for her to look back at her choices … He doesn’t save her.  She saves herself.  His presence is just an opportunity for her to think about how she wants to live again’.  That sounds emotionally complicated but what’s finally likeable – almost funny – about this sober, persistently opaque drama is Zeina Durra’s delivery of a romantic happy ending, scrupulously understated yet undeniable.

    10 November 2020

  • Relic

    Natalie Erika James (2020)

    Most of the Australian film Relic takes place in an old dark house.  The camera sneaks curiously around it.  Two of the three main characters, Kay (Emily Mortimer) and her daughter Sam (Bella Heathcote), explore more nervously.  The house is old in the sense of belonging to the same family for several generations; it’s now the home of the third principal, Kay’s mother, Edna (Robyn Nevin), an elderly widow.  The place is dark in a very literal sense.  In the prologue to Natalie Erika James’s debut feature, the murk is punctuated by candle flames and the fairy lights on a Christmas tree.  But lamps and overhead lighting are in short supply – or, at least, infrequent use – throughout the film.  No wonder it’s hard for Kay and Sam to find their way about.  At one point, a power cut prompts an alarmed exclamation from Kay.  In fact, the loss of electricity makes little difference.

    The house has a remote setting, though there’s one other house nearby, and a shabby, almost abandoned look – a slack tennis net slumps in the grounds outside.  Edna lives alone; the three women get together in her home in the aftermath of her temporary absence from it.  Divorcee Kay, who lives and works in Melbourne, receives a phone call from a police officer (Steve Rodgers) that Edna’s neighbour has reported not seeing her for a few days.  When Kay and Sam drive over to the house they find it empty.  Edna’s disappearance is especially worrying because she’s recently shown increasing signs of forgetfulness.  (There are post-its around the house with reminders to turn things on and off, and so on.)   A police search in nearby woods is fruitless but Kay gets up one morning to see her mother in the kitchen making coffee.  Edna behaves as if nothing has happened.  A doctor (Catherine Glavicic) examines her and can find nothing seriously amiss.  Edna is unwilling or unable, however, to explain where she’s been, or the large bruise on her chest.

    Relic is the latest well-received horror movie to lay spooky atmosphere on thick from the start – the tenebrous visuals (the DP is Charlie Sarroff) accompanied by seething ominous music (by Brian Reitzell).  It emerges from conversation about a book of sketches of how the property once looked that there was another dwelling on the site.  Legend has it that the male ancestor who lived there got up to very dodgy things (not further described).  After he died, his place was demolished but coloured glass from one of its windows was preserved and installed in what’s now Edna’s house.  The camera is very taken with this piece of glass.  Is it somehow linked to the things that go bump in the walls, which also are scarred by unexplained dark stains?

    If the coloured glass is one candidate for the titular relic, Edna is certainly another.  The oppressively eerie atmospherics are at first so dominant that you suspect Natalie Erika James (who also shares the screenplay credit, with Christian White) may be exploiting the old woman’s dementia for purposes of audience disorientation – as one of her means to the end of supernatural explanation.  What makes Relic distinctive, a main reason why it’s attracting critical praise, is that almost the reverse turns out to be the case.  James uses the locale and tropes of horror cinema to dramatise the horror of dementia, and of seeing a loved one submerged in it.  Hints of malign mystery like the dubious ancestor and the legacy of his pane of glass are red herrings.  The sinister emblems of decay in the house are expressions of Edna’s deterioration.

    An early hint of this comes when Kay, unbeknown to Edna, visits a Melbourne retirement home with a view to putting her mother in it.  Except for the upbeat spiel of the staff member showing Kay round, the place is silent as the grave.  Its residents, notably an old man (John Browning) whose lost eyes gaze up at Kay, are ghostlike.  (This sequence would stand out even more sharply if James didn’t make everywhere in the film look desolate.)  As the story proceeds, Edna’s amnesiac aggression, verbal and physical, moves increasingly centre stage.  Her post-it messages take an allusive turn:  an anguished scrawl of ‘Keep it out!’ refers to the disease invading her; there’s a final consolatory reminder that ‘I am loved’.  As her mind disintegrates, Edna starts to dismantle her body, scratching her chest bruise until it putrefies, picking at her face with a knife blade.  In Relic’s closing scene, Kay helps her mother remove her withered hair and rotting flesh until Edna is reduced to a corpse that brings to mind Sylvia Plath’s phrase ‘black as burnt turkey’ (in ‘Two Views of a Cadaver Room’).  Kay lies down beside Edna and touches her tenderly.  As Sam joins them on the ground, she notices a tiny black bruise – a telltale doom mark – on the nape of Kay’s neck.

    Enthusiastic reviews have majored on Natalie Erika James’s fusion of grisliness and compassion.  For Stephanie Zacharek, ‘This is a horror movie with a soul’.  Mark Kermode sees ‘plenty to scare but much more to make you care’.  Nicole Davis thinks Relic unprecedented in film drama in that it ‘gets to the heart of what it means to watch a loved one lose their mind to dementia’.  James has relevant personal experience of the disease, through her grandmother, but this kind of connection isn’t enough to absolve a film-maker of questionable taste or judgment (as Craig Roberts recently proved in Eternal Beauty (2019), supposedly an homage to his schizophrenic aunt).

    Nicole Davis’s Guardian review is headlined ‘Facing the fear:  cinema finally confronts the reality of dementia’.  That may be a fair description of Dick Johnson Is Dead, Kirsten Johnson’s documentary about her father’s degenerative illness, which Davis’s piece also covers[1].  It’s not true of Relic.  The realities of Alzheimer’s and the like include incontinence.  In James’s film, Kay is aghast to see her mother discharging black urine on the floor.  Isn’t uncontrolled peeing of the lighter-coloured variety distressing enough?  To depict the dissolution of human personality by means of a human body that literally falls to pieces seems to me the opposite of ‘confronting the reality of dementia’:  deploying the imagery of an essentially non-realistic film genre is, in effect, a distancing mechanism.  Initially monotonous, Relic is eventually offensive in its macabre exaggerations of dementia’s awfulness.

    James’s expressionism finally obliterates the slivers of dramatic realism evident in the early stages of the film.  For a while, the dynamic of the three women is striking.  Practically minded Kay has kept Edna at arm’s length until now, and has a fractious relationship with Sam.  There’s a natural emotional rapport between grandmother and granddaughter absent from the relationship that either has with Kay, who is sadly excluded.  As Edna’s condition worsens, these distinctions simply evaporate.   As the house becomes a fully-fledged metaphor of the rot and chaos of Edna’s mind, Kay and Sam, too, find themselves trapped there.  When Sam manages to shut herself in somewhere within the maze of rooms, she uses the torch on her mobile to find her way around but doesn’t think to try calling Kay elsewhere in the house to explain what’s happened.

    Edna’s neighbour Alex (Jeremy Stanford), who reported her missing, has a young adult son, Jamie (Chris Bunton).  Jamie has Down Syndrome and Alex hasn’t let him visit Edna’s house since a game of hide and seek with her went badly wrong.  She forgot it was going on and locked Jamie in the cupboard where he was hiding, and remained for several hours. Whether alive or (in the case of Edna’s suspicious forebear) dead, male characters in Relic count for little:  the main purpose of Sam’s conversations with Jamie and Alex is to deliver the revelation about the hide and seek incident.  Even so, these brief exchanges, which take place just outside the house, are a breath of air in more ways than one.  The low-key natural playing of them suggests, like nothing else in the film, the operation of a normal world to contrast with the engulfing devastation next door.  The main actresses’ opportunities increase with age, which is tough on the talented Bella Heathcote, but all three are strong.  Among Relic‘s sundry visual effects, Andrew Goldsmith’s patterns of images for the opening and, especially, the closing titles are impressively imaginative.

    5 November 2020

    [1] Afternote:  Having now seen Dick Johnson Is Dead, I can confirm this is much closer to a fair description of Kirsten Johnson’s film.

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