Saturday, February 20, 2016
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
VOICE OF YOUNG PEOPLE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE WORLD
Dimitar Anakiev
VOICE OF YOUNG PEOPLE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE WORLD
I met Elena Avdija in September 2014 during a film festival in Brest, France. She was presenting her documentary film „Do you like it better here or there?“ about young Albanians from Kosovo who were forced to leave Kosovo during the repression of Milošević regime. This film speaks from her experience and presents a foundation of Elena's authors interest. The thematic frame is broad, universal and contemporary, it includes topics like: relation to the tradition and modernity, dilemmas between ethnocentrism and multiculturalism, drama of contemporary identity for young people and role of individualism within the traditional society. She approaches these topics through the collective memory of ethnical violence, wars and exile from the post Stalinist Balkans which are very similar to the stories of other neo-colonial provinces of the contemporary world: Palestine, Syria, Ukraine etc. In that way author's voice of Elena Avdija is not only a voice of a young woman from Kosovo living in Western exile but it represents a voice of the young people from margine of the world. She reached the universality of her artistic language through uncompromising commitment to the truth, not afraid of open conflict with social norms. It is interesting that her film “Do you like it better here or there?” is shown on the both sides of recent ethnic war (Kosovo and Serbia) causing great interest and serving as a critical intercultural bridge. In today contemporary world we need more and more such bridges that offer social dialogue and open facing of the problems.
With no doubts Elena Avdija is an author with bright future. That is not only because of her social intelligence and artist talent but chiefly because of her author's courage and readiness to face open social problems crossing the borders of political taboos. As an author she doesn't make any compromise with the messages of her work. She openly defends multiculturalism and open society, communication between social groups in circumstances of war and post war hate; she is also ready to publicly discuss and defend her standing points related to her artistic work. In Brest she participated in discussion after the screening of her film with great passion and dedication. She is an artist with clear mission after the very fist step.
I think such authors like Elena Avdija must be recognized and supported by progressive social forces. I warmly recommend her work. As the editor of Post Yugoslav Black Wave program at Belgrade Short and Documentary Film Festival 2015 I included her film in our program as one of the most promising film authors of the Balkans and I look forward to seeing her new works.
VOICE OF YOUNG PEOPLE FROM THE MARGIN OF THE WORLD
I met Elena Avdija in September 2014 during a film festival in Brest, France. She was presenting her documentary film „Do you like it better here or there?“ about young Albanians from Kosovo who were forced to leave Kosovo during the repression of Milošević regime. This film speaks from her experience and presents a foundation of Elena's authors interest. The thematic frame is broad, universal and contemporary, it includes topics like: relation to the tradition and modernity, dilemmas between ethnocentrism and multiculturalism, drama of contemporary identity for young people and role of individualism within the traditional society. She approaches these topics through the collective memory of ethnical violence, wars and exile from the post Stalinist Balkans which are very similar to the stories of other neo-colonial provinces of the contemporary world: Palestine, Syria, Ukraine etc. In that way author's voice of Elena Avdija is not only a voice of a young woman from Kosovo living in Western exile but it represents a voice of the young people from margine of the world. She reached the universality of her artistic language through uncompromising commitment to the truth, not afraid of open conflict with social norms. It is interesting that her film “Do you like it better here or there?” is shown on the both sides of recent ethnic war (Kosovo and Serbia) causing great interest and serving as a critical intercultural bridge. In today contemporary world we need more and more such bridges that offer social dialogue and open facing of the problems.
With no doubts Elena Avdija is an author with bright future. That is not only because of her social intelligence and artist talent but chiefly because of her author's courage and readiness to face open social problems crossing the borders of political taboos. As an author she doesn't make any compromise with the messages of her work. She openly defends multiculturalism and open society, communication between social groups in circumstances of war and post war hate; she is also ready to publicly discuss and defend her standing points related to her artistic work. In Brest she participated in discussion after the screening of her film with great passion and dedication. She is an artist with clear mission after the very fist step.
I think such authors like Elena Avdija must be recognized and supported by progressive social forces. I warmly recommend her work. As the editor of Post Yugoslav Black Wave program at Belgrade Short and Documentary Film Festival 2015 I included her film in our program as one of the most promising film authors of the Balkans and I look forward to seeing her new works.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Saturday, February 7, 2015
POSLEDNJI DANI ACE TODOROVIĆA-premiera
POSLEDNJI DANI ACE TODOROVIĆA
Film Dimitra Anakieva, 53 min, HDV
Nastopajo: Aleksandar Todorović, Stojan Bubanja, Toma Todorović, Vesna Todorović i drugi...
Podnapisi: srbohrvaščina
Premiera ob Dnevu Izbrisanih, 26.02.2015, Socialni center Rog, ob 19:00 uri
youTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhOergEgTMI&feature=youtu.be
Sunday, December 14, 2014
POST JUGOSLOVENSKI “CRNI TALAS” U BRESTU
Dimitar Anakiev
POST JUGOSLOVENSKI “CRNI TALAS” U BRESTU
Od 5 do 11 oktobra u u Brestu, u Bretanji održan je 13. Intergalaktički festival alternativnih slika (Festival Intergalactique de L'images alternative) koji je u svojem trinaestom izdanju bio posvećen alternativnom filmskom stvaralaštvu na Balkanu tj. na području bivše Jugoslavije. Ovaj festival se od mainstreamovskih konceptualnih smotri razlikuje pre svega svojim aktivističkim karakterom koji proizilazi iz načina rada organizacije Canal Ti Zef - La Vidéo Indépendante à Brest - koji traži alternativne filmske slike i drugačije pristupe stvarnosti u raznim regionima Evrope. Aktivisti ove organizacije su sami proputovali područje bivše Jugoslavije, sagledali društvene prilike, upoznali autore i njihove filmove a takodje i lokalne institucije i festivala. Tako temeljit i dubok interes za film ali i za društvene prilike u kojima autorska dela nastaju veoma je nesvakidišnji i upravo govori o vrednosti aktivističkog pristupa u društvu i umetnosti. Naravno da su rezultati festivala u Brestu zbog toga kompleksniji i dublji – a domet dalji – od konvencionalnih filmskih smotri, bilo nacionalnih ili internacionalnih, koji posmatraju umetnička dela uglavnom na nivou njihovog jezika i formalno estetskog značaja, dok im društveni aspakt ne samo izmiče već je veoma često nepoželjan. Isto važi i za odnost prema autorima i autorstvu koji mainstreamovska komercionalna kultura svodi na odnos proizvodjača i tržišta a aktivisti Canal Ti Zef-a u Brestu grade svoj festival upravo na autorskim interakcijama, diskusiji, druženju i medjusobnoj samorganizaciji.
Jedan od spektakularnih rezultata Festivala alternativnih slika u Brestu je svojevrsna obnova Jugoslovenskog filma, pre svega alternativnog filma tj. filma društvene kritike koji je u doba socijalističke Jugoslavije bio označen nazivom “crni talas”. Pojava novog jugoslovanskog “crnog talasa” u Brestu (tj. povezivanje i jednovremena prezentacija post-jugoslovenskog “crnog talasa”) je dokaz vitalnosti i kontinuiteta autorskog filma u post-Jugoslaviji. Postoje značajne razlike izmedju nekadašnjeg socijalističkog i današnjeg kaptalističkog “crnog talasa”- pre svega u okolnostima u kojima nastaje: jugoslovenski “crni talas” nastaje u uslovima istorijske pobede dok post jugoslovenski “crni talas” nastaje nakon istorijskog poraza. Ni jedna današnja država bivše Jugoslavije ne doseže ni polovinu socijalističke privredne proizvodnje a položaj filma u nezavisnoj i nesvrstanoj Jugoslaviji bio je mnogo bolji od filma koji nastaje na istorijskom zgarištu prepušten tržišnoj stihiji, što je danas slučaj. “Crni talas” iz doba socijalizma se obično locira u godine izmedu 1958 i 1973, dakle u period pre staljinističke (birokratske) kulturne revolucije u Jugoslaviji, kada su društvene prilike bile povoljne (privredna rast, posleratna obnova zemlje, socijalistička demokratija) a društveni kriticizam stimulisan kao sredstvo dijalektičkog sagledavanja i unapredjivanja društva. Budžetski finasiran jugoslovenski autorski film mogao je da mobiliše značajne društvene potencijale dok je danas filmski autor usamljeni pojedinac izolovan na društvenoj margini koji obstaje kao takav jedino zbog tehnološke revolucije koja je video tehniku učinila široko dostunom. Jugoslovenski “crni talas” se odlikovao velikim brojem filmova i autora a takodje i značajnim uspesima (od 1958 do 1973 u Jugoslaviji je proizveden 431 film od kojih je cenzurisano 30 do 40, dakle 7-9% što je verovatno manji procenat cenzurisanih filmova od cenzure koju danas sprovodi kapitalizam putem kontrole tržišnih standarda). U Jugoslaviji 1973 dolazi do birokratskog zaokreta u celom društvu a u umetnosti počinju da važe ideološki kriterijumi koji guše slobodu stvaranja. Počinje period “crvenog talasa” koji karakteriše ideološki film i nekritični pristup stvarnosti u maniru “socijalističkog Hollywooda”. Zbog toga mnogi kritičari smatraju “crni talas” istorijskom pojavom iako su postojali i još postoje autori, poput Želimira Žilnika, koji su nastavili da traju kao autori kritičkog filma i u doba “crvenog talasa” pa i tokom mafijske restauracije kapitalizma (tzv. “tranzicija”), prkoseći shvatanju o privremenom, istorijskom karakteru “crnog talasa” i dokazujući ukorenjenost kritičkog filma na prostorima bivše Jugoslavije.
U tom smislu je 13. Festival Intergalactique de L'images alternative mesto otkrovenja, budjenja i verifikacije novog, post-Jugoslovenskog “crnog talasa” koga mi, autori kritičkog filma, nismo bili u potpunosti svesti usled okolnosti propasti, ratova i komadanja države. Autori post jugoslovenskog “crnog talasa” su malobrojni upravo zbog teških društvenih uslova, težih od onih iz doba oživelog staljinistizma: jer nacionalizam je jednako totalitarna ideologija kao i staljinizam (proizrokujući brojne ratove devedesetih) a egzistencialni uslovi na Balkanu su usled masovne pljačke društvene imovine i osiromašenja danas mnogo lošiji od onih iz socijalističke Jugoslavije. Ne iznenadjuje zato da se mnogi autori okreću komercijalnom filmu i samo retki uspevaju da uspostave kontinuitet u radu na kritičkom filmu iako vreme u kojem živimo vapi za društvenom kritikom U Brestu smo ipak videli neke vredna autorska ostvarenja “crnog talasa” od autora koji pripadaju različitim generacijama:
Kristina Rizoska (1991), Makedonija - “Prolog”, 4 min, 2012
Saško Potter Micevski (1990), Makedonija - “(Van)zemaljac Lee”, 21 min, 2012
Elena Avdija (1987), Kosovo/Švajcarska - “Is it better here or there?”, 33 min, 2013
Ognjen Glavonić (1985), Srbija - “Živan pravi pank festival”, 63 min, 2013
Nika Autor (1982), Slovenija - “Report on the situation of asylum seekers in Republic of Slovenia January 2008-August 2009”, 37 min, 2010
Đuro Gavran (1982), Hrvatska - ”Veliki dan”, 11 min, 2013
Ivana Todorović (1979), Srbija, “Kad sam bio klinac, bila sam klinka”, 30 min, 2013
Dimitar Anakiev (1960) Srbija/Slovenija, - “Slovenija moja dežela”, 50 min, 2012
Karakteristika ove grupe autora je nezavisan i nepatvoren odnos do realnosti. Tretiraju se sledeće teme: “studentski život” (Rizoska), “eskapizam-stanje duha u provinciji” (Micevski), “odnos prema tradiciji i prošlosti” (Avdija), “život u siromaštvu” (Glavonić), “azilanti” (Autor), “tribalni nacionalizam-stanje duha u provinciji” (Gavran), “seksualne slobode u provincijalnom društvu” (Todorović), “izbrisani-šovinizam kao ideologija kapitalističke tranzicije” (Anakiev). Pada u oči oskudnost generacije šestedesetih i sedamdesetih, čije se autorstvo pada u vreme rata u Jugoslaviji, medjutim autorski kontinuitet je ipak održan sve vreme dezintegracije. Dominantna izražajna forma ove grupe autora je portret, koji Glavonić raširuje u priču o dogadjaju, dok Anakiev prepliće dva portreta u priču o izbrisanima, a Gavran kreira neku vrstu kolektivnog portreta. Pristup akterima je kod Glavonića, Todorovićeve i Anakieva interaktivan - nalik na postupak u igranom filmu – reditelj sudeluje u krejiranju situacija svojeg junaka, dok većina ostalih se opredeljuje za “objektivni” pristup unutar kojeg se ipak odvijaju različiti subjektivni procesi – tako, na primer, Avdija u svoj dokumentarac umešta porodični video materijal čime produbljuje temu. Očito, autorskoj istinoljubivosti nimalo ne smeta kreativnost autora. Junaci koji se pojavljaju u delima kritičnih autora su po pravilu tzv. “mali ljudi” kroz koje autori progovoraju o svom vremenu. Uglavnom se autori odlučuju za realističan pristup svojoj temi i junaku, ali pojedini autori ipak stiliziju - kod Rizovske, Micevskog i Glavonića je to diskretna doza humora koja olakšava pristup temi. Nešto stariji autori, kao Anakiev i Todorovićeva, imaju već uspostavljen autorski kontinuitet, dok ostalim autorima predstoji dalje dokazivanje autorske pripadnosti.
Na 13. Festival Intergalactique de L'images alternative prikazani su dokumentarni filmovi o dogadjanjima na prostoru bivše Jugoslavije stranih reditelja a takodje i filmovi domaćih autora koje ne bi mogli da uvrstimo u kategoriju kritičkog (ili autorskog) filma. Ovi filmovi postavljeni su kao ogledalo autorima post jugoslovenskog “crnog talasa” i omogućavaju kompleksno sagledavanje jugoslovenske stvarnosti. Zbog čega filmovi poput “Cinema Komunisto”, “Zabrdje, selo bez žena”, “Kosmo” ili “Tukaj sem!” ne pripadaju alternativnom filmu već mainstreamovskoj tendenciji?Razlog je što autori umesto svog nezavisnog pogleda na temu koriste odredjenu ideološku poziciju, odredjeni stereotipni svetonazor, bilo da je reč o udvaranju ideologiji nacionalizma ili se temi pristupa senzacionalistički, komercijalno ili je u pitanju afirmacija odredjene politike.
Aktivisti Canala Ti Zef su sastavili mozaik post jugoslovenskog alternativnog filma što je za nas autore istorijski dogadjaj. 13. Festival Intergalactique de L'images alternative je bio istinski festival Balkanske i Bretonske kulture kome su poseban pečat dali kvalitetni muzički programi u kojima su se kao interpretatori balkanske muziku pojavljivali Bretonci. Interakcija Bretonaca i Balkanaca kroz film, muziku i zajedničku samoorganizaciju ostavili su na kraju nezaboravni pečat prijateljstva.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
REVOLUTIONARY FILM-MAKING FROM EISENSTEIN TO ANAKIEV
Montage as a Radical Ethical Act: Revolutionary Film-making from Eisenstein to Anakiev
(Journal
of Creative Geography)
Stuart
C. Aitken
Department
of Geography
San
Diego State University
Over
twenty years ago I wrote an essay that focused on montage as it is
contextualized in what I called
the image-event of film. Within this context, I defined these events
as “images in motion over
time through space with sequence” and produced an elaborate diagram
to illustrate the process (Aitken
1991, 109). As a prosaic film technique, one of the primary intents
of sequencing image events
through montage is to condense space and time in particular ways –
usually in short bursts – that
leave an audience with an abridged but understandable narrative.
Alternatively, as an extraordinary film technique, I wrote about
image-events as creative processes where certain images when
juxtaposed with others heighten awareness as a precursor to
transformation and change; I was concerned about how montage shocked
audiences into new realities. This was the original intent of Russian
filmmaker, Sergei Mikhailovich Eisenstein, who pioneered montage as a
"collision" of shots used to manipulate emotions
(Eisenstein 1949).
He believed that an idea should be derived from the juxtaposition of two independent shots, bringing an element of collage into film that told a new and different story. Eisenstein first used montage effectively in the Odessa steps sequence of Battleship Potemkin (1925) where a massacre by Tsarist troops is portrayed through a juxtaposition of images of neatly ordered soldiers firing repeated volleys of shots at the top of the stairs, Cossacks charging the crowd at the bottom of the stairs and, on the stairs themselves the montage jumps from an old woman wearing glasses, a young student, a schoolgirl and, famously, a mother who loses control of the pram containing her baby. The scene comes together to leave the audience with feelings about the undeniable brutality of the imperial Tsarist regime. This, I think, is the power of montage: it can take us beyond the mundane to an intense emotional and political engagement.
Run-of-the-mill
filmmakers use the technique to abridge and condense narrative. Good
filmmakers use
it to engage audiences and shake them out of their sensibilities. Gilles
Deleuze (1986, ix) suggests that movies grab us because they present
preverbal intelligible content,
which is not about any kind of existential or psychoanalytic lack or
repressed desire but, rather,
is about desire that is always positive. This takes Eisenstein in a
different direction, because not
only does it remove us from the bind of desire as a hole or lack we
try to fill, but it positions us as
active and positive in the creation of our own identities. Well,
almost. Thankfully, Deleuze does not
fall into the neo-liberal trap of burdening us with complete
responsibility for our desires. He acknowledges
that there is also something distinguishable from us (perhaps
external but integrally tied
to who we are) that affects our desires (It is Lacan’s big Other,
Guy Debord’s society of the spectacle,
Fred Jameson’s political unconscious, or whatever you want to call
it). Here’s how Deleuze
characterizes the internal/external processes interwoven through
image-events: movementimages are comprised simultaneously of a perception-image that moves us from indistinguished knowledge at the
periphery of our universe to a central subject position, and an
action-image that is about our perception of things at the center of
our universe and grasping the ‘virtual action’ of those things.
Concurrently, there is the affection-image that “surges in the
center of indetermination” between our perceptions and our actions
(Deleuze 1986, 65). This is very much what Eisenstein had in mind
when he talked about montage as a dialectical process. It is also
precisely about the spatiality of montage; it is an affect that
alludes to the “motion part of emotion that sloshes back and forth
between perception and action” (Aitken 2006, 494). The effect of
montage, then, points to an intensity that exceeds representation,
but is also about shocking us into action. Montage, when done well,
is more than just about condensing a series of images to proffer
information efficiently.
As
I sit in the movie theatre I want to be moved; I want to understand
bodily and viscerally in ways that
do more that suspend my disbelief, I want them to take me to new
revolutionary places. I want the
images speak to my poetic soul, and to the activist part of me that
desires change in the form of radical
ethical acts.
Eisenstein
was working his magic with montage in the post-revolutionary
communist Soviet Union. Dimitar
Anakiev is a Serbian-born film-maker working in post-independence
democratic Slovenia.
Both filmmakers are revolutionary in their politics and film practices. Amongst Anakiev’s films are three documentaries that portray the plight of the 25,671 people (including 5,600 children) who were officially erased from Slovenia’s permanent residents’ register and, as a consequence, lost basic human rights to health-care, education, housing and so forth. As a Slovenian of Serbian descent Anakiev was erased as part of the 1990s purge. Rubbed Out (2004) and Citizen A.T. (2010) tell the story of activist Aleksandar Todorović and other activist members of the Association of Erased Residents. Slovenia, My Homeland (2012) focuses on Irfan and Nisveta, who suffered horrendous abuses and privations during their erasure. Slovenia, My Homeland (2012) begins with a scene from Bled, an iconic picture-postcard lake in the Julien Alps used for touting Slovenia’s beauty, and a choir singing “Gloria in Excellus Dio.” The scene then switches to a ramshackled room where an American filmmaker is interviewing Irfan and Nisveta as they describe some of the abuses they suffered with erasure. Later, in a particularly poignant scene, Anakiev’s camera bounces between Irfan and Nisveta who are now in their respective apartments talking about the joy of their youth in Tito’s Yugoslavia and how their families were torn apart by the erasure. With each corresponding shot the camera pans in until we are focused on Irfan and Nisveta’s eyes. The whole movie is a powerful montage between state violence, erased people’s plight, official ambivalence, the destruction of youthful dreams and families torn apart. We are opened to Irfan’s joy in memories of youth when he was part of Yugoslavia’s Youth Work Brigade; Nisveta’s strength is seen as emanating from her Islamic faith and anger at being unable to return to Bosnia for her mother’s funeral. There is juxtaposition with the resilience of erased people and their willingness to organize politically and fight back. The final, powerful juxtaposition comes at the end of the film when we realize that Nisveta is one of the Catholic choir-members singing “Gloria in Excellus Dio.” Her ability to transcend religious differences between her Muslim culture and the Catholic choir are in sharp contrasted to the state violence against difference in the “ethnic cleaning” (to quote Todorović) of erasure.
As
part of my embeddedness in Slovenia these last six months I’ve been
talking to erased children and
their families, as well as to filmmakers like Anakiev. I’ve also
read everything by Slavoj Žižek that
I can get my hands on; a tough task given that he writes faster than
I read. Žižek (2014) latest tome
is about events and transition, which speaks in some ways to the
power of montage. He writes that
“an event is [about] the effect that seems to exceed its causes –
and the space of an event is that which
opens up by the gap that separates an effect from its causes”
(2014, location 63 of 2411). In this
book, as elsewhere, Žižek is indebted to Deleuze. He also points
out that there is something miraculous
about events in terms of the ways they disturb the sensible (“the
pure flow of (non)sense”
(2014, location 96 of 2411)) and this is where he gets to political
ruptures and radical ethical
acts. Radical ethics are elaborated best by Žižek’s (2010, 326)
Marxist focus on the “base” of
freedom that disrupts “a traditional ethic of common sense and
common decency among ordinary people,”
As a neo-Lacanianist, Žižek wants to find ways to topple the big
Other. He argues that this
is only possible when there is simultaneously change from within that
also changes “ensuing and
pursuant external forces through un passage à l’acte” (Žižek
2010, 326) that radical transforms the
subject and all her contexts.
By
moving from despair to hope through activism, Nisveta, Irfan and
other erased people radically transform
themselves and those around them; last week (March 15, 2014) the
European Court found in
favor of the Slovenian government paying reparations to erased people
who had filed suite, opening
the door for more reparations and reconciliations. As an erased
person, Anakiev’s radical ethical
act was to give up practicing medicine to become a film-maker. He
helped educate a generation
of Slovenians through powerful films that juxtaposed the actions of
politicians and rightwing nationals with the day-to-day privations of
erased people. His use of montage reflects Eisenstein’s
revolutionary dialectics and, ironically, Anakiev’s film practices
raise awareness of the brutal
imperialism that is sometimes embedded in what we have come to think
of as democracy.
Aitken,
Stuart C. (1991). A Transactional Geography of the Image-Event: The
Films of Scottish
Director, Bill Forsyth. Transactions, Institute of British
Geographers. New Series. Vol.
16 (1), 105-118.
Aitken,
Stuart C. (2006). Leading Men to Violence and Creating Spaces for
their Emotions. Gender,
Place and Culture. 13 (5), 491-507.
Deleuze,
Gilles (1986). Cinema 1: The movement-image. Translated by Hugh
Tomlinson and
Barbara Habberjam. London: Athlone Press.
Eisenstein,
Sergei (1949) A Dialectical Approach to Film From. Essay in Film
Form. New York. Accessed March 16, 2014.
http://interactive2.usc.edu/blog-old/wpcontent/ uploads/2010/08/Film_Form.pdf
Žižek,
Slavoj (2010). Living in the End Times London and New York: Verso.
Žižek,
Slavoj (2014). Event: Philosophy in Transit. New York: Penguin Books
(Kindle
version).Thursday, November 6, 2014
POST-YUGOSLAV „BLACK WAVE “ IN BREST
Photography by Ivana Todorović
Dimitar Anakiev
POST-YUGOSLAV „BLACK
WAVE “ IN BREST
Between 5 and 11
October, in Brest, Brittany, the 13th
Intergalactic Alternative Image Festival
(Festival Intergalactique de L'images alternative) took place. In its
thirteenth edition it was dedicated to alternative cinematic
creativity in the Balkans, that is, on the territory of former
Yugoslavia. This festival differs from other mainstream conceptual
revues, first of all, by its activist character resulting from the
working methods of the organization Canal Ti Zef – The
Independent Video in Brest which asks for alternative film images
and different approaches to reality in diverse regions of Europe. The
activists of this organization have themselves traveled through the
lands of former Yugoslavia in order to get an insight into social
situations, authors and their films as well as local institutions and
festivals. Such a thorough and profound interest in film as well as
social state of affairs in which authorial works are being created is
very unusual and it bespeaks the value of an activist approach to
society and art. This is the reason why, for sure, the achievements
of Brest Festival are more complex and profound – and their reach
further - than those of conventional film revues, whether national or
international, which mostly regard works of art at the level of their
language and formal aesthetic meaning while the social aspect does
not only elude them but is very often undesirable. The same stands
for the attitude towards authors and authorship which is presently
reduced to the manufacturer/market ratio by the mainstream commercial
culture. But the activists of the Canal Ti Zef in Brest are building
their festival upon authors’ interactions, discussions, socializing
and common self-organization. One of the more spectacular results of
the Intergalactic Alternative Image Festival in Brest is a specific
renewal of Yugoslav film, most of all, of alternative film, i. e.,
the film of social criticism which was known, at the time of
socialist Yugoslavia, by the name “Black Wave.” The appearance of
a new Yugoslav “Black Wave” in Brest (that is, linking and
simultaneous presentation of the post-Yugoslav “Black Wave”) is a
testimony of vitality and continuity of the authorial film in
post-Yugoslavia. (The expression “authorial film” denotes a
specific author’s view freed from stereotyped thinking so that it
is akin to the expression “critical film” since no freedom from
stereotypes is possible without critical thinking). Many critics
consider “Black Wave” as a historical phenomenon though there
used to be and still there are authors, like Želimir Žilnik, who
have gone on being authors of critical or authorial film even in the
days of the “Red Wave” (of the socialist Hollywood) or even
later, up to now, thus defying the concept of a temporary, historical
character of the “Black Wave” and confirming the critical and
authorial film as firmly implanted in the regions of former
Yugoslavia.
In this context, the
13th
Intergalactic Alternative Image Festival is a place of
revelation, awakening and verification of a new post-Yugoslav “Black
Wave” which we, authors of the critical film, have not been fully
aware of due to the circumstances of general decay, wars and the
state’s disintegration. In Brest, though, we have seen some
valuable works in the spirit of the “Black Wave” created by
authors belonging to various generations, namely:
Kristina Rizoska (1991), Macedonia -
“Prologue”, 4 min, 2012
Sashko Potter Micevski (1990),
Macedonia - “(Extra)terrestrial Lee”, 21 min, 2012
Elena Avdija (1987), Kosovo/Switzerland
- “Is It Better Here or There?”, 33 min, 2013
Ognjen Glavonić (1985), Serbia -
“Živan Makes a Punk Festival, 63 min, 2013
Nika Autor (1982), Slovenia - “Report
on the Situation of Asylum Seekers in Republic of Slovenia January
2008-August 2009”, 37 min, 2010
Đuro Gavran (1982), Croatia - ”The
Big Day”, 11 min, 2013
Ivana Todorović (1979), Serbia, “When
I Was a Boy, I Was a Girl”, 30 min, 2013
Dimitar Anakiev (1960) Serbia/Slovenia,
- “Slovenia My Homeland”, 50 min, 2012
The characteristic
of this group of authors is an independent and unaffected attitude
to reality. The topics they deal with are “student’s life”
(Rizoska), “escapism – provincial state of mind (Micevski),
“attitude towards tradition and the past” (Avdija), “life in
poverty” (Glavonić), “asylum seekers” (Autor), “tribal
nationalism – provincial state of mind” (Gavran), “sexual
liberties in provincial society” (Todorović), “erased –
chauvinism as ideology of capitalist transition” (Anakiev). What is
eye-catching is scarcity of those from the generation of the sixties
and seventies whose authorship took place at the time of the war in
Yugoslavia; however, the author’s continuity was still upheld
throughout the disintegration. A dominant expressive form of this
group of authors is a portrait which Glavonić expands into a story
about an event while Anakiev interweaves two portraits into a story
about the erased and Gavran creates some sort of collective portrait.
The approach to the protagonists is, with Glavonić, Torodović and
Anakiev, interactive – similar to that of a feature film – with
the director participating in the creation of his protagonist’s
situation while the majority of the others opt for an “objective”
approach within which, still, various subjective processes are taking
place. Thus, for instance, Avdija in her documentary inserts a family
video material which deepens her theme. Obviously, the author’s
truthfulness is not at all brought into question by the author’s
creativity. The heroes appearing in the works of the critical authors
are, as a rule, so-called “small people” through whom the authors
speak about their own times. Mostly the authors opt for a realistic
approach to their themes and protagonists though some of them still
turn to stylization which, in the case of Rizovska, Micevski and
Glavonić, takes the form of a discreet dose of humor which makes
easier to access the theme. Somewhat older authors, like Anakiev and
Todorović, already possess an established authorial continuity while
the other authors are yet to further confirm their authorial
affiliations.
At the 13th
Intergalactic Alternative Image Festival also shown are
documentary films about the happenings on the territory of former
Yugoslavia made by foreign directors as well as those of home authors
which could not be ranked in the category of critical (or authorial)
film. These films are posited as a mirror to the authors of
post-Yugoslav “Black Wave” and thus they enable a complex insight
into Yugoslav reality. But, why aren’t films like “Cinema
Communisto”, “Zabrđe, A Village Without Women”, “Cosmo” or
“I Am Here!” ranked as alternative films but as those of the
mainstream tendency? The reason is that the authors, instead of their
independent view of the theme, use a certain ideological position, a
certain stereotyped worldview, no matter if it is the matter of
adulating the ideology of nationalism, dealing with the theme
sensationally or commercially or affirming certain politics.
The activists of Canal Ti Zef have put
together an intricate mosaic of Yugoslav film in post-Yugoslavia in
their attempts to understand social developments as well as to show a
variety of cinematic tendencies which is of historical importance for
our region. The 13th Intergalactic Alternative Image
Festival is a true festival of Balkan and Breton culture that
was given a special impression by likewise high-quality music
programs in which the performers of the Balkan music were Bretons
(along with the presentation of 33 films and many discussion
sessions, 6 concerts were held). The interaction of Bretons
and Balkan people through film, music and common
self-organization have, to sum up, left an indelible impression of
friendship and mutual understanding which is, after all, a mission of
art.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)












