Tag Archive: voyeurism


Dasatskisi (Beginning) directed by Dea Kulumbegashvili (Georgia , 2020)

Winner of best full-length movie at this year’s Trieste Film Festival, ‘Beginning’ has also been shown, and widely acclaimed, at many other festivals including New York, Toronto (where it premiered in September 2020), and Adelaide.

The praise is merited. There are not enough female directors and fewer still prepared to take the risks Kulumbegashvili does. This is her debut feature film but it already shows her to be a woman who combines originality and courage in her filmmaking style. In one interview she says “plot is for structure, the rest is cinema”, “this film is about looking” and “the more action there is on screen, the more passive the viewer is”.

‘Beginning’ is essentially a character study of an alienated woman Yana (Ia Sukhitashvili ) who is married to David (Rati Oneli), a Jehovah’s Witness leader, and who has a young son Giorgi (Saba Gogichaishvili).

The movie is powerful but not without flaws. At 2 hours and ten minutes, it is a good 20 minutes too long. In the final sections there is a shift of focus to the religious indoctrination of children and we briefly follow the husband’s life. These are superfluous distractions from Yana’s story. Continue reading

THE STORY OF LOOKING by Mark Cousins (Canongate Books, 2017)

mark1As with his previous book – The Story Of Film (the tie-in with the brilliant Channel 4 series) , Mark Cousins acts as an articulate and able guide in the same way that E.H. Gombrich did for ‘The Story of Art’ in 1950.

Like Gombrich, the language is kept simple and jargon free in order to appeal to readers of all ages.

It’s easy to imagine Cousins carefully preparing each chapter in the same way as teachers put together lesson plans. He’ll have pack of slides to show and discuss in the classroom but he’ll be ready to shuffle these up to keep students on their toes and to relieve boredom.

There is clearly an educational purpose behind such an ambitious study but there also a desire to keep things as light, accessible and entertaining as possible. Continue reading

The heartless horror of Mother!

MOTHER! directed by Darren Aronofsky (USA, 2017)
mother1

Beware of films with exclamation marks in the title!

“Mother! is a movie designed to provoke fury, ecstasy, madness, and catharsis, and more than a little awe”.  This verdict is from a review in Vox that Darren Aronofsky says ‘gets it’.

It culminates in an apocalyptic finale that works on the theory that nothing succeeds like excess. It is shocking in the sense of being shockingly awful.

If Aronofsky’s goal was to get under my skin he succeeded but, while I usually gain a perverse pleasure from mindfuck or body horror movies, this one left me cold and with feelings of distaste and repulsion. Continue reading

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS directed by Tom Ford (USA, 2016)

“All the animals come out at night” – Travis Bickle – Taxi Driver (1976)
“Now it’s dark” – Frank Booth – Blue Velvet (1986)

nocturnal_animals_posterInspiring comparisons with the finest works of Martin Scorsese and David Lynch is a sign of how impressed I am by this magnificent movie.

Tom Ford’s equally fine debut A Single Man from 2009 can no longer be dismissed as a one-off.

Well-established as a hugely successful fashion designer, Ford does not need further acclaim or money. Wealth does not guarantee creative inspiration but it does buy a certain freedom. Perhaps this is how he has been able to be so uncompromising and daring in his adaptation of Austin Wright’s novel Tony and Susan. Continue reading