Ivo Skoric on Tue, 30 Apr 2002 02:55:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re-watching old movies |
Re-watching old movies Sjecas li se Doli Bel? (Do You Remember Dolly Bell?, by Emir Kusturica, 1981, Venice film festival Golden Lion award winner) Yesterday I watched again Kusturica's first movie. Now, twenty years later, looking at it from far and beyond, it is really just a beautiful small dark comedy. There is humor in almost every scene of this film in which everybody smokes or is encouraged and prodded to smoke cigarettes - even in the scene of dying (of lung cancer?). That humor is neatly summarized in the film's thematic slogan: "every day in every way we get better and better." Kusturica earns merits for making fun of the ironies of life in the so-called communist society. The humor seems to be absent only from a very, very realistic scene of violence, in which Dolly Bell's pimp beats up the main character. Casual domestic violence is satirized. 'Pater familias' is portrayed as jovial, intelligent, street-smart old gent, and his slapping kids and shutting-up women around him is presented in a humorous way and with no trace of critique of the domestic violence issue. Violence in general is viewed fatalistic - as an inevitable and unchangeable fact of life. So, why don't we just make fun of it and get on with our lives? Now, keeping in mind that ten years after that film was produced, the generation, that grew up watching it, got involved in some of the worst violence in the century, one cannot avoid asking whether such approach to the issue of violence in this and, perhaps, other films of that era, could contribute to the later popular acceptance of the concepts for violent social change in the region, or is that the same type of argument like saying that Hollywood films like The Fight Club cause the actual violence in the US society? Ivo _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold