Chroniques de la vie quotidienne

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Denys Desjardins et Jacques Leduc

Lors des Rencontres Internationales du Documentaire de Montréal en novembre dernier, ma femme Jocelyne Clarke a assisté à un atelier très intéressant avec Jacques Leduc, Denys Desjardins et Richard Brouillette, autour d’une série de films unique: Chronique de la vie quotidienne. Jocelyne est réalisatrice ( Edith et Michel) et a participé à la programmation aux Rencontres depuis le début.

Phot Jocelyne Clarke
Jocelyne Clarke

J’ai cessé de compter le nombre de fois que le mot “liberté” à été prononcé en référence à cette oeuvre unique dans l’histoire du documentaire québécois. Produit officiellement en 1977 (mais entamé plusieurs années avant) par Jacques Bobet à l’ONF, conçue et réalisée par Jacques Leduc en collaboration avec quelques douzaines d’autres illustres artisans du cinema d’ici, elle s’étale sur 4 heures et demi, réparties en 8 films de longueurs disparates variant de 10 à 82 minutes. L’idée et l’urgence étaient un retour au cinema direct – déjà “contaminé” par l’arrivée en force de la television (que Leduc qualifie de “moyen de transmission” et non de “langage cinématographique”). On voulait témoigner de l’époque à travers les grands axes de la vie – l’amour, l’argent, l’alimentation, l’habitation, la mort. Des petites équipes partaient tourner quelqu’événement – un défilé d’hommes en bobettes, la construction de maisons en banlieu, un groupe de femmes aisées s’affairant à des oeuvres charitables. Des clichés insolites mais essentiels, du quotidien de la ville en ces temps encore innocents. Le matériel s’organisait au fur et à mesure, dans un va-et-vient organique entre les tournages et le montage. Le piétage fut réparti en thèmes qui devinrent éventuellement les jours de la semaine. Avec les chutes trop précieuses pour laisser de côté mais qui n’entraient pas dans la structure découverte, on a monté un dernier petit court – Le plan sentimental – remarquable autant pour son visuel improvisé que sa trame sonore soigneusement élaborée.

La discussion s’est attardée un bon moment autour de la question – une telle oeuvre pourrait elle être réalisée aujourd’hui? Pas de réponse catégorique mais on était d’accord généralement que les contraintes télévisuelles – les longueurs fixes, l’exigence de scénarios détaillés, les quittances – vont à l’encontre d’une telle liberté, sans toutefois la brimer complètement. On a parlé aussi d’une naïveté et d’une insouciance face à la caméra, longtemps révolues dans la foulée des “reality shows”. Aujourd’hui par contre, l’accès aux technologies légères et à diverses formes de distribution sont des atouts inconnus à l’époque.

Une série remarquable trop peu apprécié par le public et qui mériterait certainement son coffret DVD. Pour en savoir plus, aller sur le site de l’ONF et faites une recherche dans la collection sous “série”, ou rechercher chaque titre, que voici:

Lundi – Une chaumière, un coeur.
Mardi – Un jour anonyme.
Mercredi – Petits souliers, petits pains.
Jeudi – À cheval sur l’argent
Vendredi – Les chars.
Samedi – Le ventre de la nuit.
Dimanche – Granit
Hors série – Le plan sentimental.

Doc from here: Un coin du ciel.

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Karina Goma.

Un coin du ciel (translates as ‘a corner of the sky’ but there is no english version yet) is the latest documentary by the young filmmaker, Karina Goma, produced by Virage Productions. It introduces us to the corridors and the offices of the community clinic in Park-Extension, one of the most cosmopolitan districts of Montreal. I will have the occasion to see it later at Ex-Centris, but in the meanwhile I asked my assistant Dijana Lazar to review it for us:

“Karina’s film allows us to discover a very different aspect of Montreal and the life of its immigrants. The subject of thisfilm are two social workers from the Parc Ex CLSC, Helene and Tassia who work assiduously to improve the daily life of their clients who are often victims of injustice and isolation, overpowered by problems of integration, living in rat infested residences, dealing with landlords who are insensitive to their requests. We see these people in front of our eyes, anxious and timid: Lourdes, a young Sri- Lankan woman who is pregnant with her second child; an old lady who waits with dread to be expelled from her apartment and an Armenian father-son duo. We follow their dubious destinies throughout the sinuous corridors of the CLSC, and into their often dilapidated residences, their places of worship, places of comfort and communion. Unquestionably the CLSC plays a crucial part in the life of all these characters and one hopes that Karina’s very human film will manage to break down some of our prejudices and favour compassion.”
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Karina Goma

Another interesting fact is that this film comes out right in the middle of the controversy over the ‘accomodements raisonnables,’ in Quebec – this is a debate about what special measures should be taken to accomodate immigrants and their culture and religion. The film was deposited to the commission which has been set up to hold hearings on the subject, the Bouchard-Taylor Commission, in Laval on last 15 November. I put a question to Karina on this subject.

“Your film is now seen in the context and light of the debate over ‘reasonable accommodation’. Was this your intention? Are you happy about this or not?”

“The research for this film began more than three years ago at a time when nobody spoke about any reasonable accommodation. During filming a controversy over prenatal classes broke out: men were allegedly excluded from these classes for religious reasons. I was devastated, because it is not at all the reality which I had witnessed while shooting. Finally in order to get the local women out of their isolation the CLSC decided to replace the traditional theoretical courses with multilingual meetings which were moderated by immigrant women in the district. In the tumultuous context of this new “scandal”, nobody really took the time to check the very particular context in which these meetings took place. In a flurry of shocking headlines the initiative of the CLSC was largely condemned. This was very painful for the workers involved because after years of effort they had developed a way of working in which they believed in and which seemed to be giving concrete results to the very vulnerable clients. As delays are sometimes very long in releasing documentaries, the film opens now just as the debate becomes hotter than ever in Quebec. It is a coincidence, but I think that the timing is ideal. I hope that the film will allow the audience to discover these people who have to reinvent life often under very extreme conditions to find new ways of living together.”

Don’t miss this documentary which will be shown at l’Ex-Centris from the 7 till 13 december 2007.

(Thanks to Dijana Lazar, and to Jeanne Pope for the translation.)

Doc d’ici: Un coin du ciel

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Lourdes

Un coin du ciel est le dernier documentaire de la jeune cinéaste Karina Goma, produit par la compagnie Virage. Il nous introduit dans les couloirs et les bureaux du CLSC Parc-Extension, l’un des quartiers les plus cosmopolites de Montréal, ainsi que dans la vie de ses résidents. J’aurai l’occasion de le voir à l’Ex-Centris, mais entretemps j’ai demandé à mon assistante Dijana Lazar de le visionner et de nous en parler. Voici ce qu’elle dit:

“Le film de Karina nous fait découvrir une toute autre réalité de Montréal et de la vie de ses immigrants. Au cœur du sujet, deux travailleuses sociales du CLSC Parc-Extension, Hélène et Tassia, qui travaillent assidûment pour améliorer le quotidien de leurs clients, souvent victimes d’injustices et d’isolement. Accablés par les problèmes d’intégration, de logements infestés de rats, de propriétaires insensibles à leurs demandes, nombreux sont ceux et celles qui nécessitent cette aide. On les voit défiler devant nos yeux, inquiets et timides : Lourdes, une jeune femme sri-lankaise enceinte de son deuxième bébé, une madame âgée qui appréhende l’expulsion de son appartement, un duo père-fils arménien qui sort de l’ordinaire. On suit leurs destins incertains dans les couloirs sinueux du CLSC, mais aussi dans leurs logements souvent délabrés et dans leurs lieux de culte, places de réconfort et de communion. Indéniablement le CLSC joue un rôle crucial dans la vie de tous ces personnages et on espère que le film de Karina, par sa grande humanité parviendra à briser quelques préjugés et éveiller notre compassion.”

Photo-Karina
Karina Goma


Autre fait intéressant, ce film sort en plein milieu de la contreverse sur les accomodements raisonnables; il a même été déposé à la Commission Bouchard-Taylor lors des audiences à Laval le 15 novembre dernier. J’ai posé une question à Karina sur ce sujet.

Ton film est maintenant vu dans le contexte de et à la lumière du débat sur l’accommodement raisonnable. C’était ton intention? Tu en es contente ou pas?

La recherche du film a débuté il y a plus de trois ans, à l’époque personne ne parlait des pratiques d’accommodements raisonnables. C’est pendant le tournage qu’a éclaté la controverse autour des cours prénatals dont les hommes étaient soi-disant exclus pour des raisons religieuses. J’ai été dévastée, car ce n’est pas du tout la réalité que j’avais observée sur le terrain. Afin de sortir les femmes du quartier de l’isolement, le CLSC a remplacé les cours théoriques traditionnels par des rencontres multilingues entre femmes animées par des immigrantes du quartier. Dans le tumulte de ce nouveau « scandale », personne n’a vraiment pris le temps d’aller vérifier sur le terrain le contexte très particulier dans lequel avaient lieu ces rencontres. À coup de titres-chocs et de formules lapidaires, on a condamné en bloc l’initiative du CLSC. Cette histoire a été très douloureuse pour les intervenants, parce qu’après des années d’efforts, ils avaient développé une formule à laquelle ils croyaient et qui donnait des résultats concrets auprès d’une clientèle très vulnérable. Comme les délais sont parfois très longs en documentaire, le film sort cet automne alors que le débat fait rage plus que jamais au Québec. C’est une coïncidence, mais je pense que le timing est idéal. J’espère qu’il permettra de découvrir ces gens qui réinventent dans des conditions souvent extrêmes, de nouvelles manières de vivre ensemble.

Ne manquez pas ce documentaire à l’affiche à l’Ex-Centris du 7 au 13 décembre 2007.

Merci à dijana Lazar

An inspiring contest: Digital Diversity. Heat is on!

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Abdallah of Mile-end from Adam Shamash’s film.

I don’t know if you know about Radio Canada’s contest ‘ Digital Diversity/Métissé Serré’? It is a very well organized competition which allows for audience participation. No surprise, for one of the persons in charge is Michel Coulombe who we know as a founder of the ‘ Silence – on Court’ shorts competition. ( Cancelled last year, unfortunately.) If you want to vote in the finale of the contest this week – visit the site for more information. www.rcinet.ca

I asked Michel Coulombe some questions:

– To your knowledge are their already competitions of this sort on the web?
“As far as I know it we are defiantly innovators!
There have been several competitions here and elsewhere, which involved online voting, notably Silence – on Court – of which I was the programmer – but I have found nothing, which resembles what we have set up with this theme on immigration.

How did you put together the resources to set up this competition?
“The competition was born from a suggestion given to me last winter by Radio Canada International from which I laid the foundations or the base of what became: Matisse Serre/Digital Diversity followed up with Generation DX2. All financing comes from RCI, with the exception of outside business partnerships which were established to hand out the awards.”

What percentage of the films are documentaries? (Rough estimate)
“More than two thirds of the films submitted are documentaries.”

– Do you have a lot of participation from the outside on evaluations of the films?
“There are good number of viewers from overseas obviously due to the subject matter, but we can only go by comments that people have left, and who chose to be identified.The success of this project has to do not only with our online presence but also by the number of screenings which have been held in the four corners of the country –Halifax, Toronto, Montreal, Quebec, Gatineau, Vancouver, etc – as well as in Cuba, France, United States, Morocco, Colombia, Benin, Mexico, etc.”

I asked my assistant Jeanne Pope to interview one of the participants who is also an intern with me. Here is Jeanne’s report:

Adam Shamash is a Montreal-based filmmaker currently in his final year of studies at Concordia University. (Also friend and undergoing an internship with Magnus.) His current documentary project explores the oneness of human spirituality. He likes traditional wisdom, karate, and ice cream. Visit his website: www.onelightcinema.blogspot.com


AdamShamash-face

What I love about his film is it is so immediate, on the go-go, while Abdallah without a doubt steals the show; drawing us in as he rushes around Mile-End, bantering, telling jokes… I say no more, you just have to view it yourselves and let Adam lure you in to vote for his film with his words.

What inspired you to enter the competition?
“I’ve been wanting to work on something that portrays the uniqueness of the Mile-End neighbourhood for a while, and when I got word of the competition of immigration, I decided that my friend Abdallah, a Djboutian-born Canadian, would be the perfect cultural guide.”
Why Abdallah?
“To me, Abdallah has a fantastic sense of identity- at once, he comes from a traditional country, and carries the mantel of wisdom and stories from his childhood in Djbouti. At the same time, he is totally comfortable and happy with the fact that he is now part of the Canadian So here it is in a nutshell. Digital Diversity is down to the semi finals with only ten films to go. Four from Ontario: Five from Montreal and one from BC.
He’s multicultural tapestry. He gets along great with pretty much everyone, and he has some great insights into life.”
What do you feel about this format?
“I think that the format of the video is great, because you have to be concise in order to tell your story in less than 7 minutes. There are a lot of very creative films in the competition, and the web-based cinema concept is really thrilling- it is relatively inexpensive to submit your work, and to screen it.One complaint that I have been hearing is that the layout of the website is complicated. The other drag with the concept is the voting dilemma: every time that a film progresses to the next round, the vote counter is reset to zero, which means that the filmmaker has to bother all of his contacts again to recast their votes. Overall, however, the experience has been great, and the Digital Diversity team at Radio Canada is really professional.”


Métissé sérré: le dernier droit d’un concours inspirant

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Abdallah de Mile-end, le personnage du film de Adam Shamash.

Je ne sais pas si vous connaissez le concours ‘Métissé Serré’ de Radio-Canada ? Mais c’est une belle expérience participative, très bien organisée. Pas une surprise, car un des responsables est Michel Coulombe (bio) que nous connaissons en tant que fondateur du défunt programme ‘Silence on court.’

Vous aurez une chance de voter dans la finale du concours cette semaine – allez voir sur le site du concours
J’ai posé quelques questions à Michel Coulombe qui me dit:

“A ma connaissance, oui, nous innovons. Il y a eu plusieurs concours ici et ailleurs qui ont mené à des compétitions en ligne, notamment par le biais de Silence, on court! dont j’assumais la programmation, mais je n’ai rien trouvé qui ressemble à ce que nous avons mis en place sur le thème de l’immigration. Le concours est né suite à la proposition que m’a faite Radio Canada International l’hiver dernier, à partir de laquelle j’ai jeté les bases de ce qui est devenu Métissé serré/Digital Diversity et sa suite, Génération DX2. Tout le financement vient donc de RCI, à l’exception des partenariats que nous avons établis pour pouvoir remettre des prix. Plus des deux tiers des films soumis sont des documentaires.

De toute évidence, il y a bon nombre de visionnements de l’étranger, ce qui est dû notamment au réseautage attribuable aux sujets des films. Là dessus nous ne pouvons que nous fier à l’information que nous trouvons dans les commentaires qu’on nous laisse dans lesquels les internautes s’identifient parfois. Le succès du projet se mesure d’ailleurs non seulement en ligne mais aussi au nombre de projections qui ont lieu non seulement aux quatre coins du pays (Halifax, Toronto, Montréal, Québec, Gatineau, Vancouver, etc.) mais également à l’étranger (Cuba, France, États-Unis, Maroc, Colombie, Bénin, Mexique, etc).”

J’ai demandé à mon assistante Jeanne Pope de faire une petite entrevue avec un des participants qui fait un stage avec moi. Voici le texte de Jeanne:

Adam Shamash est un jeune cinéaste montréalais présentement à sa dernière année d’études à l’Université Concordia. Son plus récent projet documentaire explore la singularité de la spiritualité humaine. Il s’intéresse à la sagesse traditionnelle, au karaté et il raffole de la crème glacée. Visitez son site web

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Adam Shamash

Ce que j’ai aimé de ce film c’est sa spontanéité, sa dynamique, et bien sûr Abdallah qui, avec ses blagues et ses taquineries, attire notre attention et nous entraîne dans ses courses farfelues à travers le Mile-End. Je n’en dis pas plus, vous devriez juste le voir et laisser Adam vous convaincre à voter pour son film.

Qu’est-ce qui t’as incité à participer à ce concours ?
“Depuis un certain temps je voulais travailler sur un projet qui montrerait l’originalité du quartier Mile-End et quand j’ai entendu parler du concours sur l’immigration, j’ai décidé que mon ami Abdullah, canadien d’origine djiboutienne, serait un guide culturel parfait.”
Pourquoi Abdullah?
“Pour moi, Abdullah a une excellente notion de l’identité; il vient d’un pays traditionnel et porte en lui la sagesse ancestrale et les histoires de son enfance à Djibouti. En même temps, il est tout à fait heureux et à l’aise avec le fait d’être canadien. Il est comme une tapisserie multiculturelle. Il s’entend bien avec tout le monde et il a des idées très positives sur la vie.”
Qu’est-ce que tu penses du format?
“Je pense que le format vidéo est excellent, car il t’oblige à être concis pour réussir à raconter ton histoire en moins de 7 minutes. Il y a un grand nombre de très bons films en compétition, et ce concept du cinéma-sur-internet est vraiment excitant : on peut soumettre son film et le visionner sans que ça coûte très cher.
La seule critique négative que j’ai entendue sur le concours est que la mise en page du site web est trop compliquée. L’autre problème est la question du vote : à chaque fois qu’un film se rend à l’étape suivante, le compteur est remis à zéro, ce qui veut dire que le réalisateur doit à nouveau contacter ses amis pour qu’ils votent une autre fois. Dans l’ensemble cette expérience a été formidable et l’équipe de Métissé Serré de Radio Canada a été très professionnelle.”

Merci à Jeanne et à Diana Lazar !

Closing of the RIDM: Shake the Devil Off

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Father Jerôme Ledoux, the main character from the film ‘Shake the Devil Off.’

The RIDM ended in beauty with a closing film which I loved, ‘ Shake the Devil Off ‘ by Peter Entell, from Switzerland. Filmed in News-Orléeans, it follows the struggle of a predominantly black population trying to maintain its parish of St Augustin. In this corner of the world which has been devastated by the hurricane Katrina, the church, with its incredible pastor, it is the symbol not only of it’s historical identity but also the solidarity of its people.Yet the hierarchy within the Catholic Church finds that St Agustine does not bring in enough dividents, and the archbishop trys to close it down, wanting to impose upon them a white priest from the parish next door.

The film follows a battle which ensues in an flawless manner, staying close to the characters, following evey twist and turn in the fight.
The choice of music reminds us of the past marked by slavery, and that the afro-American culture is simply marvellous – this complety impregnates this film which is a true work of art!

The priest Jerôme Ledoux is an extraordinary figure, and was there with Peter Entell for the closing ceremony, dancing on the stage. He even succeeded in drawing everyone into a singlong with gospel songs!
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Thanks to the RIDM for the great programme and wonderful photos!

(Jeannette Pope. Translation.)

Clôture des 10e Rencontres du Documentaire de Montréal

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Le père Jerôme Ledoux, personnage principal du film ‘Shake the Devil Off.’

(There will be an english translation of this post in a few days.)

Les Rencontres (Montréal) se sont terminées en beauté, avec un film de clôture que j’ai adoré, ‘Shake the Devil Off’ ( ‘Chassez le démon’) de Peter Entell, de la Suisse. Tourné à Nouvelle-Orléans, le film documente la lutte d’une population majoritairement noire pour la sauvegarde de sa paroisse, St.Augustin. Dans ce coin dévasté par le passage de l’ouragan Katrina, l’église avec son merveilleux pasteur représente à la fois leur identité historique et une solidarité actuelle. Mais la hiérarchie de l’Église catholique trouve qu’elle ne rapporte pas assez. L’archevêque veut la fermer, il veut imposer un curé blanc de la paroisse à côté. Le film suit toute la bataille qui s’ensuit d’une façon exemplaire, se collant à la peau des personnages, croquant tous les rebondissements et revirements de situation. L’utilisation de la musique pour rappeller l’héritage de l’ésclavage et de la culture afro-américaine est merveilleuse et rythme le film. Un vrai chef d’oeuvre !

Le prêtre Jerôme Ledoux est un personnage extraordinaire, et il était là, en compagnie de Peter Entell pour la ccérémonie de clôture. Dansant sur la scène, il a réussi à entraîner toute la salle dans des gospels !

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Merci au RIDM pour la belle programmation, et pour les photos.

Seen at the RDIM: De l’autre côté du pays

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Angelina, one of the people from the film: De l’autre côté du pays, in a dormitory where her daughter, Charlotte was taken by the rebels and held captive for 8 years.

The RDIM began with force. I found the choice of the opening film, Junior – a film by Isabelle Lavigne and Stephane Thibault, really very good. The film-makers spent one year in Baie-Comeau on the north coast of the St Laurent immersed with a team of young ice hockey players. We live day by day the difficult decisions which have to be taken – and especially lived by these young players who have the dream and ambition to become future professionels. An original subject, with great access and clear esthetics (We never see the actual game, which is good because the real subject is elsewhere, in the revealing interactions between players and coaches. ) I admire the perseverance of the filmmakers and also the great editing by René Roberge. The support of the ONF ( NFB) and the producers Yves Bisaillon and Johanne Bergeron to have brought this film to the furthest possible point.

Amoung other films that I saw was : Catherine Hebert’s film : De l’autre cote du Pays, produced with Brigitte Dion – Mango films. A very beautiful film on the victims of the civil war in Uganda – filmed in the northern part of the country. We are able to get close to the people in a very intimate way; allowed to take the time to listen as well as get to know the people. This is a film where a certain structure rules between a poetic frugality from the filmmaker and the very hard and tough realities of war. I spoke with Catherine and this is what she recounted:
“This film was made clandestinely. The Ugandan government did not permit any journalist nor filmmaker to get anywhere less than 40 kilometres from the city. To get to the north we had to go at least 350 km, which meant that the equipment had to be light and discrete, yet we don’t really feel this in the quality of the film. At the same time electricity cuts were frequent, we could not reply on any sort of network, we had to frequently recharge our camera batteries with a car battery. The technical challenge was huge. Lastly, due to the state of the roads and being unable to see at night (because of the attacks by rebels), to move up north was particularly difficult. ”
Catherine Hébert août07
The choice to make such a poetic film on such a hard subject was not easy. Can you speak to me about it?

” The first thing that I said to Annie Jean, the first day of editing was that I wanted to make a film that was political as well poetic. This was our motto the whole time during the work. As I had spent a lot of time in Uganda before filming, I had a clear idea of how I wanted to film this country as well as the people.

“The war in the north of Uganda is insidious and permanent. In other words this is a war, which shows itself the more that one observes it. The beauty of the luxurious countryside and the nonchalant slowness of the people do not allow us to feel at first glance that we are in the presence of a continuing war. We are far away from the war that is feed to us by CNN from the Orient. One has to spend some time here to feel the unhappiness and to understand the suffocating violence, which envelops everything here in the north of the country. I had to remind myself the whole time as I filmed that I wanted to use this contrast between the beauty of the country and the violence of the conflict. This is why I chose that the war should be revealed by people where daily life functions through violence and fear.

“The film exposes the war in such a way that the people live it every day, pushing them to hide, to move on, to fight, to carry children in their bellies…. ….Each person reveals something about how the war has ravaged their life and in which ways it has taken them – children who hide in the midst of night, of the deportation camps, which bind them so awfully together….
I wanted, with these images to feel a compassion but not to commiserate. Too often, films made by outsiders seem to find it hard to make this distinction with the political documentary which is sacrificed at times by form; which is inevitable in certain cases, yet I was convinced that it was possible to pay service to the form as well as the denunciation. A documentary can at times be political as well as aesthetic, it can be a rugged cinematographic search, yet deliciously filmed. I hoped to not only direct the camera towards these people, I also wanted to accompany them more then observe them. The camera is with them more than on them.
In this film I wanted to transmit this atmosphere where everything seemed possible. By the rhythm of the images and the editing and by the construction of the sound I hoped to create a counterpoint between the drama being evoked, and on the other side the serene betrayal of the people and the locations. The menace is not punctual nor routine, but is constantly present; although there are no real signs that let us know this. This tension makes up the numerous contradictions in Africa, and in this conflict.
“To finish with – one must not forget that these images are also born from the sensibility and the wonderful work that the DOP gave to this project – Sebeastien Gros. They were also influced by the numerous group discussions that we had ; including Melanie Gauthier the sound recordist who created the sound scape for the film.”

(Translation: Jeannette Pope.)

les deshonneur des casques bleus

(This is a translation from a post from last week. Sorry it’s late! Jeannette Pope.)

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Rape victims in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

I saw more films at the RDIM. The Danish film –The Monastery tells a most extraordinary story, so well told that we completely ignore a certain lack of professionalism in the actual shooting of the film. In Denmark an old and eccentric man decides to leave his castle – which is in shambles – to the Russian Orthodox church to change it into a monastery. As a delegation of sisters arrive to take possession and install themselves, tensions begin to rise which at times become very amusing.
The filmmaker – Pernille Rose Gronkjaer manages to get close to the old man, Monsieur Vig and an attachment grows….The film won the Joris Ivens award at IDFA 2006

I also saw Ghosts of Abu Ghraib; very strong, about the inquest into scandal and tortures in this famous American-run prison in Iraq. Produced by HBO. It is efficient, television slick – and leaves absolutely no doubt that the ultimate responsibility for the torture lies higher up, with U.S. military and political leaders .

But I really want to speak about Raymonde Provencher’s new film. Les deshonneur des casques bleus, about the epidemic of rape and other sexual crimes committed by soldiers from the United Nations in several countries; in particular in The Democratic Republic of Congo where most of the film was shot.
This inquiry is without any complacency what so ever. It is solid and very well filmed, following up on Raymonde’s previous film : ‘War Babies’ on rape as a weapon of war. These are both from Macumba International Productions, a small company with a good track record based here in Montreal.
Photo Raymonde

It is paramount to report what The Blue Beret’s are up to, this is clear; but it also takes courage to do so. I asked Raymonde if she had hesitated, if she had been afraid to give ammunition to the enemies of the United Nations, to the whole idea of multilateral intervention and peacekeeping.
Here is her answer:

“Don’t we always have to argue with ourselves when confronted with such situations. To say or not to say; that’s it, huh ? In this story I am completely on the victims’ side. I was so very shocked by the irresponsible attitude of certain people who work for the United Nations. People who have a moral authority, simply that, over the civil population who are so vulnerable.
From the beginning I specified in my scenario that I would not challenge the existence of the casques blues. Yet what to do about it? This tool of intervention used by the International community has to be held in place, but are we to tolerate the perversity which prevails? We’re not talking here about isolated cases, these are serious slip ups; crimes; pedophilic acts, which mostly go unpunished. These are victims of war and having lost everything they are put into camps and then along come the casques bleus, and they hope, these people, finally, that their nightmares may end. But no, they are victims of new indignities….This makes me think of the Rwandans who sought out refuge in churches to hide from the genocide to find out that the priest, or the sister were hand in hand with the killers…
I do not think that I am going to give ammunition to the enemies of the UN. I do not think that under this pretext, they must silence the truth. It is necessary to do something about the shootings, and it is urgent, otherwise, the United Nations will have no more credibility. It’s everyones job, including documentary filmmakers, to draw attention to the problems which have to be solved. ”

A must-see film !

Carlos Ferrand’s coup de coeur: ‘Description of a memory’

(This is a translation of a post from last week, thanks to Jeannette Pope.)

The RIDM was at its peak yesterday.

I saw ‘The War on Democracy’ by John Pilger who was here for the occasion. Not my type of cinema – the moments of spontaneity are rare – but it has a very good analysis of the American intervention and progressive forces in Latin America. The passionate crowd at Concordia University received Pilger like a hero. (A screening jointly organized along with Cinema Politica.)

Pilger
John Pilger, Photo: Simon Bujold

CARLOS FERRAND’S COUP DE COEUR: ‘DESCRIPTION OF A MEMORY’

Last week I asked the programmers of RIDM to give us their ‘coup de Coeur.’ This week it is the turn of my filmmaker friends.

The RIDM dedicated a page to Carlos Ferrand. The festival has presented three of his shorts as well as his new feature-length film – Americano – produced by Les films du tricycle.
Carlos is a visionary filmmaker full of contradiction and ambiguity and with one hell of a writing style!
Here is his ‘coup de Coeur’, a film that will be screened later this week in which an Israeli filmmaker reappropriates the material in a film by Chris Marker to construct his own vision of things.
Carlos
Carlos Ferrand below, the Papa.

‘Description of a Memory’ the film by Dan Geva stays in the head and spirit like the good proverbial wine in the mouth. In contrast to the current fashion which puts simplicity and other synonyms of easiness into form the core; here is an ambitiously, complex, difficultly rich and over demanding piece of work.
Like the memory that Dan Geva tries to catch, the film has numerous facets. The surprising element is that the form and content are in harmony. What is absent in the work is that tyranny of content – which is so often present in documentaries – where the form lies flat in front of ‘Master Reality!’
No, not here – the viewer has to work almost harder than the filmmaker. Dan Geva nags into our brains, obliging us to constantly reconstruct his meanings and marry them with the images and decipher the signs in Chris Marker’s film and his own.
It is like a hunt of meaning with the film, filmed with a terrifying angular objective which seems to swallow the world.
Enough is not enough and the aggressivity of the images makes one think of the battle between the Mongoose and the snake. A fight till the death against all stupidity and age-old ideas!

Dan Geva has balls. Dan and his wide-angle lens stands up against Chris Marker, the sacred monster of independent cinema in a sort of game, but also with generosity which proves that he himself is worthy of being a monster and that we should bless him.
Dan the mongoose crunches his head – a sort of bitter taste – like most of the best tonics – to to be savored raw!”