<http://www.propeller.com/viewstory/2007/12/09/romania-shakes-up-the-film-wo
rld>
http://www.propeller.com/viewstory/2007/12/09/romania-shakes-up-the-film-wor
ld

 

05/12/2007

All eyes on the December children

 

Romania is emerging from the chaotic aftermath of communism to shake up the
world of film. By Jan Schulz-Ojala

 

Revolutions in the cinema seldom need the masses. Four or five names usually
suffice; they come together when the benevolent film god focusses on a
particular place at a particular time and in a blinking of an eye the screen
world is a new one. In the late fifties of the last century a few prominent
French film critics decided to try out things behind the camera and bada
bing, the Nouvelle Vague was born. In the mid-nineties a few boisterous
Danes wrote a seemingly ascetic manifesto and suddenly all other films
looked like they were under a thick layer of dust compared with the Dogma
productions. For a decade now the clear, stringent language of a handful of
German directors has challenged the ubiquitous noise cinema and by now they
are happy to be counted as part of the prestigious "Berlin School", a name
they didn't coin for themselves.

All stills from "4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days" courtesy Mobra Films
<http://www.mobrafilms.ro/> 

Sometimes it is a central aesthetic concept which unites these small groups
of extreme individualists; sometimes it's the weight of historical
circumstance. The handful of Romanian directors who are now causing a stir
in international auteur cinema, belong to a generation of 30 and
40-somethings who grew up under Ceaucescu but were not broken by him. The
decline of the Romanian film industry - in the year 2000 not a single film
was made there - was something they all witnessed while still in school. But
in the last few years they have cranked up the country's film funding
apparatus again and attracted the world's attention by winning international
prizes.

In particular the ever innovative Cannes festival paved the way for the
success of Catalin  <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0594198/> Mitulescu, Cristi
Puiu <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1090998/> , Corneliu Porumboiu
<http://news.softpedia.com/news/Porumboiu-039-s-Film-Happened-or-Not-Wins-at
-Cannes-24878.shtml>  and Cristian Mungiu
<http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0612816/> . And this year an uninterrupted
stream of short and debut film prizes followed the first Golden Palm ever
awarded to a Romanian director. Cristian Mungiu accepted it with the
beatified words that you "need neither a big budget nor big stars to tell a
story the world wants to hear."

These new filmmakers call themselves - in reference to the fall of Ceaucescu
in December 1989 - "December children." And unlike old masters such as
Lucian Pintilie <http://romania-on-line.net/whoswho/PintilieLucian.htm> ,
who has lived in exile in France for so long that Romania might as well be
Absurdistan to him, or Radu Mihaileanu <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0586123/>
("Train of Life") another emigrant to France, they make realistic cinema
albeit with a satirical twist - testaments to a lively confrontation with
the past that double as imposing critiques of the present.

In "12:08 East  <http://cineuropa.org/film.aspx?documentID=64424> of
Bucharest" (2006) Corneliu Porumboiu has three provincial souls deliberate
on a bizarre talkshow over "whether the revolution ever took place outside
Bucharest"; in "The Death of Mister Lazarescu
<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0456149/> " (2005) Cristi Puiu traces the final
odyssey of an old man through the hospitals of the capital; and in Cristian
Nemescu <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0625904/> 's "California
<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0449573/> Dreamin'" (2007) set during the
Kosovo war, village inhabitants pull out all the hospitality stops for a
company of US soldiers stranded in their railway station, right the way
through to the bitter, blood-spattered end.

Cristian Mungiu gives a wide berth - perhaps this is what sealed his success
at Cannes - to all export-friendly items such as humour and fantasy with
which Eastern Europeans have traditionally flavoured their former
circumstances to make them internationally palatable. "4
<http://www.4months3weeksand2days.com/blog/index.php> Months, 3 Weeks, 2
Days" is a chronological description of a day and a long evening, almost in
real time, using long, scene-length shots. It is the story of the lead-up
to, execution and aftermath of a secret abortion in a small town in Romania
in 1987. The only touch of irony comes in the titles at the end which
announces that the film is the first of a trilogy of "Stories from Golden
Age" in which Mungiu will describe everyday life under Ceaucescu.

The dictator ushered in the golden age of the breeding machine in the early
days of his rule in 1966 with "Decree 770", a law so hated that it was
abolished immediately after his fall. In order to mass produce communist
offspring, women under 40 with less than four children faced stiff prison
sentences for having abortions. The birth rate soared initially - indeed
Mungiu who was born in 1968 is one of the "decreed" - but soon the number of
terminations started rising dramatically. As a result, thousands of women
are estimated to have died in the course of the years.

Mungiu's film never bangs a drum about this; his film functions for the
viewer without any background knowledge. With absolute historical precision,
and at the same time extreme aesthetic reduction, he shows the gauchely
nervous Gabita (Laura Vasiliu) and her vigilant room mate Otilia (Anamaria
Marinca) preparing for the abortion in a hotel room; the "angel maker" (Vlad
Ivanov) they pay to carry it out taking financial and sexual advantage of
their plight; and the two young women attempting to deal with the layers of
physical and psychological trauma once it's all over.

Packing their things together in their student accommodation, searching for
a hotel room where the women at the reception are the horribly perfect
embodiment of socialist non-service, the first cool words with the
abortionist in the car, the negotiations with him which start off quietly
and quickly escalate into a fracas, and later Otilia's final duty of
friendship where she hastily dispenses with the foetus in the night. All
this is dealt with in a few pithy scenes where the hand-held camera is
permitted a minimal tremor at most, however long it concentrates on one
thing. But there is a tremor, right from the start.

Only once does the camera (Oleg Mutu) give way to what one might call the
lust for spectacle. It shows us for a matter of seconds only, the dead
foetus, wrapped in blood-stained towels. But it would be quite wrong to cast
"4 months...." as an anti-abortion film. Mungiu's film never judges; it
soberly recounts the total contamination of everyday life through the abuse
of power, while cleverly avoiding anything directly political. It is a fact
that the ban on abortion delivered hundreds of thousands of women into the
hands of such mini-dictators of the moment. The criminality of the system
was recognisable even its most distorted manifestations.

[.]As the founder of Mobra Films <http://www.mobrafilms.ro/> , Cristian
Mungiu is his own producer. And now his moving, brilliantly acted film, in
which every one of its 113 minutes is gripping, is currently touring the
[.]cities of his home country in a caravan rigged up with a projector. And
little by little his ticket sales are nearing the million mark.

This article originally appeared
<http://www.tagesspiegel.de/kultur/Kino-Rumaenien;art137,2423292>  in the
Tagesspiegel on 20 November, 2007

Jan Schulz-Ojala is a film critic for the Tagesspiegel

 

C Propeller
 
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