Monday 28 April 2014

The third letter, 2014-04-28, to Yun-hua

Hello Yun-hua!

I hope you've had a good weekend. It’s been busy days here, with me finishing a major article for an edited collection, and other assorted assignments and responsibilities, but all I really wanted to do was to reply to your sweet letter. Now I finally got the time to do so.

For you the films by Hou that are set in the past are the better ones, but I couldn’t make such a distinction. I like almost all of his films equally much, whether a contemporary like Millennium Mambo or a historical like A Time to Live, a Time to Die. (But maybe I like Café Lumière a little more than the others. I like it a little bit more than almost any other film). I didn’t care much for Good Men, Good Women, but it was a long time since I saw it so I might feel differently today. What do you think of Flight of the Red Balloon, which is so far from Taiwan?

What I like about his films is the warmth and wit, combined with the focused and beautiful compositions, that often gives the scenes such a feeling of intimacy you feel like you’re intruding. I think that is one of the most treasurable aspects of cinema, these moments when you want to look away, or feel ashamed for disturbing the people on the screen. Like the scene (to depart from Hou) in The Diving Bell and the Butterfly when Max Von Sydow’s character starts to cry, uncontrollably, or towards the end of Make Way For Tomorrow when the old couple go out to a restaurant together, one last time before they will be separated for ever.

This brings us into a discussion about cinema and ethics, and ethics and acting, something which I’m interested in (I have given papers on the subject.) But I feel that is for a later letter!

It’s funny that you should mention the word Zeitgeist because I’ve been thinking about that lately. There have for example been a retrospective of Jia Zhangke’s films here at the Cinémathèque so I have re-watched some of them, such as Unknown Pleasures and Still Life. His films are sometimes said to capture the Chinese Zeitgeist, and I can see why but also how it is somewhat limited because China is a huge country, and a film like Unknown Pleasures is only looking at a few people in a particular place. The Uyghur’s are not in the film for example, and neither are the successful businessmen in Shanghai. Still Life does succeed in capturing more of China but it is still a select view. Of course, it couldn’t be anything else, and he wasn't trying to capture it all. And what he did capture he captured amazingly well.

The second time I thought of Zeitgeist was because of Joseph L. Mankiewicz (to mention one of Deleuze’s time-image directors). He I feel managed to capture, remarkably well, the American moment in a series of films in the late 1940s and early 1950s, in particular A Letter to Three Wives (1949) and People Will Talk (1951). The films discuss class, sexuality, masculinity, tax politics, the problems for returning soldiers to re-adjust to civilian suburbia, ladies fashion, the bad impact of commercials on our daily lives and the degradation of culture and civility. Even farm policies. There’s an extraordinary wealth of themes and topics that are brought into focus by Mankiewicz’s scripts and direction, like if he was doing some kind of sociological fieldwork. And in that respect I think of these films as capturing the Zeitgeist. The way he juggles different time frames simultaneously, the forking paths, adds to this sense. (They’re also filled with delicious wit and emotions of course.)

But there’s also a different kind of Zeitgeist, and I thought of that when I recently re-watched WarGames, a computer thriller by John Badham from 1983. It’s about the fear of nuclear war, the computerisation of society and the military-industrial complex, and it has two teenage kids, a boy and a girl, as the heroes, saving the world from annihilation. Although it was probably not trying to deliberately capture the spirit of the times, it did so anyway, with the combination of teenagers and computers. All of the guys who were involved in the dot.com bubble around 2000 probably knew that film by heart, growing up as computer geeks and dreaming of playing thermonuclear war with a computer named Joshua.

I watched films about kids and computers in the 80s although I didn't dream of becoming one of them. Not sure what I actually dreamed off though.

 Fredrik

Saturday 19 April 2014

The second letter, 2014-04-19, to Fredrik

Dear Fredrik,

Thank you for the heart-warming first post! You were the first and only person that came to my mind when I thought of doing an epistolary film blog, and I was very happy to find your response the same enthusiastic. I am sure a lot of green tea would be drunk and I am looking forward to seeing where our shared journey on the web would take us.

Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996) is an opportune choice, not only because I, to some extent, said goodbye to the south. More interestingly, it can open up a discussion on “our favourite Hou”. I don't think we actually talked much about Hou back in our St Andrews years. While waiting to see if Hou's first martial art film, The Assassin (2014), would actually become my favourite Hou, for the time being I am including the Taiwan Trilogy (1989-1995), Flowers of Shanghai (1998) and Three Times (2005) in my shortlist (maybe not that short after all). I do like Goodbye South, Goodbye, but for me this film, along with Hou's other attempts on capturing the Zeitgeist of my generation, like Daughter of the Nile (1987) and Millennium Mambo not as profound and timeless as his gaze towards the past. Without getting into a discussion on Deleuzian Time-images, I find that Hou's depiction of memories and historical trajectories is of a much broader scope and touches upon helplessness of human existence to such a level that makes me deeply sad but lucid during every single viewing. One does not need to be familiar with the geopolitical context of the island in order to see the beauty of irrevocably turbulent past shared by individuals who simply drift along. Yet I never quite get the same sensation from Hou's view of the contemporary. One might think that there is definitely something global in decadent young life under neon streets lights, but I somehow doubt that this is conveyed at all in Zhu Tianwen's script, as much as I admire all her writings; I find that Hou's films about the present are often characterised by repetitive and twisted dialogues, and actors' extradiegetic public images often override their presence on screen. This chain of thoughts also leads me to question how we deal with our own present artistically. How remote do we have to be from ourselves in order to acquire certain lucidity? Is that why we are so obsessed with cinematic rendering of different versions of apocalypse, as we cannot look at ourselves straight into the eyes? Here are my initial thoughts. Happy Easter holidays!

                                                                      Yun-hua

Wednesday 16 April 2014

The first letter, 2014-04-16, to Yun-hua

Dear Yun-hua,

I'm very grateful to you for contacting me and suggesting we do something together, some kind of web-based project. It's been some time since we last saw each other in St Andrews, several years in fact, but I remember fondly our many talks (some more serious than others). I hope this blog will give us the opportunity to continue those discussions for a long time. The last couple of days I've been reading Here and Now, a recently published collection of letters that Paul Auster and J.M. Coetzee sent to each other from 2008 to 2011, and it has been very inspiring. Consequently I was especially thrilled to be given the chance to do something similar, and with you. (They write mainly about sports, politics and literature, but films as well, so we might borrow a quote or two.)

When I designed (perhaps too big a word) the blog I wanted to have some photographs on it and I chose two images from two films. Above your name I chose an image from Goodbye South, Goodbye (Hou Hsiao-hsien 1996), a Taiwanese film in honour of your birthplace and also because your thesis is partly about Hou and his films. With the same logic I should probably have chosen a still image from a film by Hasse Ekman above my name but since I'm a fan of Japanese films of the 1930s, and also a champion of lesser known, or unknown, films and filmmakers, I went with Humanity and Paper Balloons (Sadao Yamanaka 1937), a wonderful film (as is Goodbye South, Goodbye). But these photos might be exchanged for others later on, so maybe Ekman will eventually appear .

But that's all for this first letter. It's going to be very interesting to see where this will take us. As Vince Vaughn says in The Wedding Crashers, I'm psyched!

all the best,
Fredrik