The
Jihlava IDFF presents the work of the German film essayist Harun Farocki and
the Argentinian revolutionary Raymundo Gleyzer
Each year the Jihlava International
Documentary Film Festival organises its traditional programme section
TRANSLUCENT BEINGS, which profiles the work of selected figures in world
documentary filmmaking. This year the section focuses on the work of the German
director-essayist Harun Farocki and the Argentinian revolutionary filmmaker
Raymundo Gleyzer. This autumn Jihlava is also welcoming important guests to
take part in both retrospectives.
Harun Farocki
I have a
sense of too much self-preoccupation among those filmmakers and journalists
today who believe they are producing reality. Their assumptions arise from a
belief that whoever controls the computer or the camera also controls reality.
--Harun
Farocki
Harun
Farocki was born in Nový Jičín on 1 September 1944. The
long-time editor of the magazine Filmkritik (1974-1984) and a versatile
artist, he has made almost 90 films, regularly organises multi-media
installations, publishes books, and is also engaged in the academic sphere -
working at the universities in Berlin and Berkeley and currently a visiting
professor in Vienna.
Farocki's
unique poetics are characterised by a critical dialogue with the technocratic
present. The "inconvenient" Farocki first earned a name for himself with one of
his very first films, The Inextinguishable Fire (1969), in which he
traced the process of the production of napalm and placed the circulation of
this "commodity" in a wider social context. Social changes brought about by the
modern "media revolution" are a key theme for Farocki. Using associative
montages, strictly objective composition, and quasi-educative commentary, in
his films he attempts to show how much our society is in the grasp of the power
of images.
This
retrospective will include the following films by Farocki:
-Nicht löschbares Feuer (The
Inextinguishable Fire) (1969) - Farocki's uncompromising
contribution to the debate on the war in Vietnam applies a variety of
perspectives to examine a fundamental socio-economic metaphor of that era - napalm.
-Bilder der
Welt und Inschrift des Krieges (Images of
the World and the Inscription of War) (1989) -
Farocki's cult piece that goes in quest of the boundaries of the visual
representations of the world and their ideologically motivated images.
-Arbeiter
verlassen die Fabrik (Workers Leaving the Factory) (1995)
- Lumière's famous footage is the inspiration for a film treatise on the
history of cinematography and the industrial use of human labour.
-Erkennen und
Verfolgen (War at distance) (2003) - a
film essay on how war affects industrial production and how the methods of war
are projected into our everyday lives.
-Videogramme
einer Revolution (Videograms of a Revolution)
(1992) - the last days of the Romanian dictator Ceausescu through the lens that
defined the nature of the 20th century - film cameras in the hands of Farocki
and the Romanian writer Andrei Ujica.
http://www.farocki-film.de/
Raymundo Gleyzer
Filmmakers
in South America working in the name of
revolutionary film must not stop at the point of mere criticism or a call for
reflection; their work must be a call to action. They must bring people to
tears and anger, enthusiasm and faith...
--Raymundo
Gleyzer
Raymundo Gleyzer was born on
25 September 1941 in the Argentinian city of Buenos Aires. He grew up poor and began
working in a copper-wire factory at the age of thirteen. He began studying film
at the film school in La Plata.
His student feature film El Ciclo (The Cycle) was compared for its
poetics with the early works of M. Antonioni. He did not complete his studies,
but he worked for several for an Argentinian television station and as a
foreign correspondent he even wound up in Czechoslovakia in 1969. In 1971 he
founded the revolutionary film group Cine de la base. Its members shot their
films illegally and then screened them also illegally. They not only wanted to
report truthfully about the situation in the country, they wanted also to form
a resistance to dictatorship. As a result of this subversive activity Gleyzer
was abducted in May 1976. Such prominent figures as Jane Fonda, Francis Ford Coppola, Arthur Penn, Carlos Saura, Federico
Fellini, and Jean-Luc Godard called for his release. He died under thus far
unclear circumstances.
Gleyzer's
enthusiasm for left-wing "revolutionary art" was awoken very early on. He saw
film not just as a gloss or commentary on contemporary social situations, but
also and especially as one of the primary media through which it would be
possible to shift the status quo towards an explicitly defined ideological
goal. Use film as a weapon and mould it, as Fernando Solanas would have
said, with a consciousness of "film as action".
"In my
country, in Argentina,
it is impossible to make films within the system because the censor bodies do
not just monitor political films alone but all human relationships. That is why
we prefer to make films outside this system and screen them for small groups of
viewers... It is better to communicate a clear idea to twenty people than
confusing thoughts to thousands, which is exactly what we would be doing if we
worked for the system." (From an interview with the Cuban director Tomás
Gutiérrez Alea)
The Jihlava
IDFF plans to screen all of Gleyzer's key films, and a sample of the selection
includes:
-La Tierra quema (The Land Burns) (1964)
- a short film describing the bleak reality of life in the rural regions in Brazil through
the story of thirty-five-year-old farmer Juan Amaro
-México, La revolución
congelada (Mexico, The Frozen Revolution (1971,
awarded the Golden Leopard at the International Film Festival Locarno) - the
film was made during the Presidential campaign. For many years it was banned in
Mexico
owing to its politically subversive and irreverent nature.
The festival
will also show footage filmed in Czechoslovakia for Argentinian
television in 1969.
http://www.filmraymundo.com.ar/
JUANA SAPIRE
AS A GUEST AT THE JIHLAVA IDFF
The Jihlava
IDFF will welcome Juana Sapire, Gleyzer's wife and close co-worker, as
an important guest to accompany Gleyzer's film profile.
Born in Argentina, she
studied production at the Argentinian Institute of Independent Film and met her
future husband in 1957. She worked on all his films, starting with La Tierra
quema. In the literally tumultuous circumstances in which the majority of
Gleyzer's films were she occupied the functions of sound mixer and producer. In
1971 she and her husband, along with other politically active filmmakers,
founded the group Cine de la base. She recalls: "We found this group in
order to infuse our political efforts with life even in the cultural arena. Our
objective was to shoot films for workers who had no access to commercial
production. We screened films in sheds, in schools, in factories in the poorest
neighbourhoods. And people understood us, as we were speaking about them and
about their problems, in their language."
After her
husband's tragic death she went into exile and continued to work with several
other filmmakers. Since the late 1990s she has been actively promoting
Gleyzer's work, which has come to be somewhat overlooked, and she initiated the
creation of the biographic documentary Raymundo (2002).