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Scheherazade, Tell Me a Story Review, MEIFF

Scheherazade, Tell Me a Story Review, MEIFF

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 3 months ago
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Hebba (Mona Zaki) is sort of a sex pot Tim Russert. With bright red lips and tight Eurotrash-girl-reporter get-ups, she intimidates the powerful guests of her politically controversial late-night talk show by all but crawling across the desk to interrogate them. Newly married (for the second time, as is repeatedly pointed out, lest we forget that this is the apparently 30-something’s Last Chance At Love) to an ambitious flunky at a State-run newspaper, Hebba submits to her husband’s aggressive request that she tone down her implicit criticism of contemporary Egyptian government by devoting her show to “stuff you can’t blame the government for” –– at least until he secures a key promotion. After an encounter with a shopgirl who cuts a glamorous Western-esque swath by day only to don a hijab to walk through streets littered with burning trash at night, Hebba figures she can give her husband the superficial human interest stories he wants and still slip in a bit of hard truth. The sob stories of Egypt’s everyday women turn out to be so politically incendiary that their fallout hits Hebba where she lives. Literally.

The existence of Yousry Nasrallah’s Scheherazade, Tell Me a Story within the contemporary Egyptian film industry mirrors the uneasiness of storytelling in a less-than-open state that’s at its story’s core. Both visually and politically provocative, the film has managed to triumph over controversy and censorship to become a huge critical and commercial hit in its home country. A triptych-within-a-story revealing women as the invisible victims of the Muslim world’s pains of growing into modernity, the epic drama sometimes wears its muckraking intentions a little too plainly on its sleeve, but its fusion of campy/soapy pleasures into serious social satire is unforgettable.

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Abu Dhabi Diary: Bollywood meets Hollywood, Tourism and Appropriation

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 3 months ago
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Call it a study in failed tourism: in four expeditions into urban Abu Dhabi in search of specific destinations, I got lost and gave up before getting there three times. The problem — at least, its a problem for us New Yorkers; I’m sure it makes perfect sense to Abu Dhabi residents –– is that the buildings in the city have no street addresses. The email sign-offs of MEIFF employees state the address of their office as “Abu Dhabi Film Centre, next to Abu Dhabi TV, opposite Rosary School.” Locals find things by referring to landmarks: schools, malls, hotels or, in the absence of a structure that takes up a city block or more, usually a fast food place, apparently most commonly a KFC. My adventures getting repeatedly lost in this system sort of puts a new spin on my Das Racist analogy from earlier in the week: in a city that has erased most visible traces of its pre-1970s, Bedouin history to make way for global capitalism, the only commonly understood landmarks left are a product of that economic eagerness. And, of course, mosques.

Even after days of curious and ultimately confused wandering, including a trip to The Largest Mosque in the Arab World where I was harshly scolded by security guards every time my bangs fell out of my loose-fitting borrowed shayla, the place I felt most like a tourist in Abu Dhabi was in a movie theater. From the moment I got off the plane in Abu Dhabi, Blue had been billed to me as the hot ticket of the film festival. A Bollywood caper starring Indian superstars Sanjay Dutt and Akshay Kumar and former Miss Universe Lara Dutta, and featuring music by Slumdog Millionaire Oscar winner A. R. Rahman and Kylie Minogue, the film’s sole Gala screening drew a sample of Abu Dhabi’s large South Asian population apparently starved for a glimpse of famous faces. Judging from the lengthy line that snaked through the Emirates Palace before the screening, there was much more popular demand for Blue than for any of the Hollywood features or international indies given similar Gala treatment.

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THE SHOCK DOCTRINE at MEIFF

THE SHOCK DOCTRINE at MEIFF

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 3 months ago
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Since first premiering at Berlinale in February, Michael Winterbottom and Mat Whitecross’s The Shock Doctrine has itself absorbed a couple of major shocks. In the intervening months, the film has been recut (or, as Whitecross put it when introducing Shock in Abu Dhabi this week, “finished”) for fine tuning and to add material about the global financial crisis. Shortly before this altered version of the film premiered on UK television in September, the author of the book that inspired the film, Naomi Klein, made headlines by disassociating herself from the project. Because there was not “complete agreement between the directors and myself about the content, tone and structure of the film,” she told The Independent, she chose not to narrate the film or accept credit as its writer. The paper spun this as a falling out between the writer and the filmmakers; Klein then published a statement on her website softening the impression of conflict, saying that the she and Winterbottom “came up with a compromise: that someone other than me would narrate and that it would be clear in all materials that this was not my film but rather Michael and Mat’s adaptation of my book.” Whatever the production circumstances might have been, the adaptation lacks Klein’s gift for untangling relatively complicated webs of social, political and economic history with graceful persuasion.

Klein’s theory begin with the economic philosophy of University of Chicago professor Milton Friedman, which postulated that governments could take advantage of disasters to increase their power and decrease the freedoms of the governed, because “only a crisis, actual or perceived, produces real change.” The film meticulously (if too briskly) outlines how notions of Friedman and his disciples (called the Chicago School) were exported — with full knowledge and help of the US government, and the implicit support of the Nobel foundation –– to places like Chile, Russia and, um, England, resulting in disastrous dissolutions of governments, near-total hijacking of democratic freedoms, and economies fueled by fear. Moving quickly from one Chicago School application to the next, Shock really only slows down for long sequences of incredible archival footage of the urban warfare in which this socio-economic “shock therapy” inevitably results.

After the MEIFF screening on Sunday, Whitecross elaborated on the split between the directors and the author. Acknowledging that Klein had wanted to produce a work of investigative journalism, covering new ground and shooting loads of fresh material while Whitecross and Winterbottom were more interested in “translating” her analysis of recent world history by plumbing media archives, he insisted that Klein was “involved all the way to the end,” up to and including the portion of the film about the financial crisis produced after Shock’s premiere at Berlinale. The film doesn’t feel disingenuous to Klein’s ideas, but it does seem like it could make better use of her. She appears on screen in two modes: b-roll shows her scribbling notes “on the ground” at disaster zones from Baghdad to New Orleans, while documentation of Klein’s various panel appearances and lectures serve as the most concrete, precise delivery systems for her actual talking points. The entire argument really only comes into crystal clear focus fairly late in the film, via a lecture clip in which Klein appeals to the audience’s “feelings” about 9/11 and the ensuing expansion of government — something we can all understand, that swiftly and simply allies the viewer on an emotional level to the Chileans and Russians previously screwed over by the work of the Chicago School. This single moment renders most of Kieran O’Brien’s barking narration superfluous.

Throwing out the show-don’t-tell rule, Whitecross and Winterbottom show, tell, show again and then yell. While images of Thatcher supporting her “friend” Pinochet as he’s arrested for murder in Britain go miles further in suggesting her guilt than the long section of the film equating her crimes (union breaking, the sale of public-owned industries) with his (mass murder, torture, kidnapping, censorship…) The Shock Doctrine suffers from the same problem that weighed down Whitecross and Winterbottom’s The Road to Guantanamo (which remains the more elegant, focused, fascinating film): their material is so powerful that the filmmakers could essentially just thread it together and their polemical argument would state itself, but they weaken their case by beating us over the head with “evidence” that their chosen villains — particularly Friedman, Thatcher and every American Republican politician of the past 40 years, but there is also a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it bashing of the Clinton administration for supporting Yeltsin — are not just politically questionable, but unquestionably evil. If much of the footage here could beautifully speak for itself, a few frames of Donald Rumsfeld apparently smirking in front of the still-burning 9/11 Pentagon crash site just pushes the argument into the realm of cartoon.

As a work of anti-fascist propaganda, The Shock Doctrine might have felt refreshing several years ago, when audiences starved for angry media were forced to make do with Michael Moore. But at this point, how many more airless, humorless indictments of British and American political wrongdoings do we need to see from members of the villains’ own voting republics? The question that The Shock Doctrine and all similar films seem to revolve around is, “How could this happen in our democracy?” The weak answer usually offered is “Because the idiots who don’t watch films like this voted for the wrong people.” The Shock Doctrine, almost accidentally, reveals this as the false solution that it is. There’s a clip towards the end of the film of Obama’s election night acceptance speech, which he began by looking directly into the camera and saying, “Hello, Chicago.” By showing this as Barack Obama’s first public words as the President elect, the implication is that this is the guy who will finally break from the pattern set up by the Chicago School, this is the guy who finally look at real bad guys dead in the face and destroy their dominance. If only he had shown such strength in real life!

Clowns to the left, jokers to the right. Flattening popularly elected leaders into smarmy supervillians while essentially picking a hero at random, The Shock Doctrine offers evidence that liberal polemics have devolved into a cycle of caricature that’s indistinguishable in form from the media produced by the opposite side.

Abu Dhabi Diary Day 3: Iraqi Middlebrow and the Mall Multiplex Complex

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 4 months ago
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“I’m at the film festival. I’m at the mall multiplex. I’m at the combination film festival venue/mall multiplex.”

So I tweeted from the Toronto Film Festival this year, in a quick-wink rewrite of Das Racist’s avant-retarde one-liner critique of contemporary global capitalism and cultural homogenization, “Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell.” Twitter is rarely a venue for deep thoughts, and with that update, I was definitely being cute/glib. But the more time I spend watching allegedly non-commercial films in capitalist cathedrals round the world, the more it seems like there’s something there to this Das Racist analogy.

One of TIFF’s two mall multiplexes, the Varsity, completely reverts to festival screenings during the festival; I’m fairly sure the other, the AMC, gives many screens over to press and public screenings but holds on to a few for regular screenings of the usual Hollywood fare. As the mall multiplex becomes an increasingly ubiquitous film festival venue (how many festivals of size can you name that don’t make use of one at all?), it’s the latter tactic that’s more common. The dissemination of ostensible fine art film is only possible on any kind of grand scale thanks to these venues, virtually identical in every city that they appear in around the world, and thanks to their main business trafficking motion picture products that are as divorced from “cinema” as the fare sold at a combination Pizza Hut/Taco Bell is divorced from their ostensible Italian and Mexican sources respectively. In a city like Abu Dhabi, that juxtaposition really throws into relief “festivalism,” as it has recently been derogatorily termed by A.O. Scott, as the embodiment of deviance. (See also an amusing alternate definition of Festivalism, involving the “metamorphosis of capitalism into something less predatory, that I found via an accident of Google)

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Abu Dhabi Diary, Day 2

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 4 months ago
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The Middle East International Film Festival is entering into its third edition. For its first two years, the fest was produced by Pyramedia, the production company of Oprah-esque media multi-hyphenate Nashwa al-Ruwaini, which is also responsible for Prince of Poets, a Eurostar-esque competition dedicated to original poetry that draws huge TV audiences in the region. From what I’ve gathered in my short time on the ground here, the consensus seems to be that while al-Ruwaini and crew put on a good show, their iteration of MEIFF had little interest in making a mark on the international film festival landscape, or participating in the wider conversation about film culture.

This is one thing that the new creative minds behind the festival, led by former Tribeca artistic director Peter Scarlet, seek to change. At a press briefing here today, consultant Lucius Barre, who has been tasked by the festival with hiring and training a permanent, year-round communications team, aligned the mission of the new MEIFF with what he described as the original charter behind the Cannes Film Festival: “To gather films from as many parts of the world as possible, show them under the best technical circumstances possible, and thereby foster goodwill” to the peoples of the world. “My aim,” he went on, “is to show the world the welcoming face of Abu Dhabi” to the international film community. Whereas other artistic initiatives in Abu Dhabi (including the upcoming branches of the Louvre and Guggenheim museums set to open in the emirate within the next three years) are sponsored by the Abu Dhabi tourism agencies and thus are primarily  a one-way gesture of pulling people and money in, it seems that MEIFF is interested in forming lasting two-way connections between this region and the wider world.

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Abu Dhabi Diary, Day 1

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 4 months ago
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The flight from JFK to Abu Dhabi was twelve hours, non-stop. Once I figured out how to recline my sleeping pod seat, I slept for eight of them. I spent the rest of the flight exploring the on-board entertainment system. I watched an episode of Mad Men, an E! Special on sexy celeb style or some such that bent over backwards justifying Audrey Hepburn to the youngsters, and part of Rian Johnson’s The Brothers Bloom, which was coincidentally the opening night film at the Middle East International Film Festival — my hosts in Abu Dhabi — last year. Every selection on the on demand video server on Etihad Air (“the national airline of the UAE”) was preceded by an ad for TDIC, the Tourism Development Investment Corporation of Abu Dhabi. After seeing this promo several times, I partially memorized the accented-English voiceover: “The foundations for Abu Dhabi’s future development have been with us for generations,” the voice boomed. Attracting Western tourism and business, it promised, would reveal “the next treasures in Abu Dhabi’s bright future.”

As the plane descended into Abu Dhabi, the entertainment system locked, and each seat back screened a short promotional film that made the boosterism of the TDIC trailer seem mild. As soothing music played, the film offered a series of titled tableaus depicting what would ostensibly await us on the ground. Title: “True Arabic hospitality.” Image: four-top filled with what look to be Europeans, lunching at an outdoor cafe. Title: “Desert adventures.” Image: A camel crosses the screen from right to left, revealing an American-looking couple lounging in a sand dune, laughing, champagne glasses aloft. Title: “Understated luxury.” Image: The camera pans up to the interior of a domed ceiling, adorned with tilework that would’ve made Gaudi blush.

So much of any in flight experience is about distracting the passenger from thoughts of the worst case scenario. This landing film, shown to a captive audience of passengers who clearly have reason enough (business leisure, or … other?) to travel halfway across the planet to the UAE, seemed to be about allaying any residual fears of the culture shock/conflict awaiting them in this foreign land. This film seemed to say, “Put your nightmare stereotypes about Arab hostility against your way of life aside — we love capitalism!”

Above: the view from my room at the Intercontinental. Yes, that’s smog — thanks to its desert clime and the absurdly high standard of living of its elites, Abu Dhabi reportedly has the biggest carbon footprint of any city in the world. That’s why they’re aiming to build Masdar City, an experimental “carbon neutral ecotopia” within the city by 2018.

I have to run to get my press pass now. More on my first day in Abu Dhabi, and the opening night festivities, when I return.