Showing posts with label The Painted Bird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Painted Bird. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2020

The Painted Bird: In the Dawn of the Holocaust

By José Alberto Hermosillo

“The Painted Bird” is a monumental achievement and a remarkable cinematic experience—an epic journey of hope and despair. It is one of the best movies about the Holocaust ever made. It is simply marvelous!

 

“The Painted Bird” is a war-survival film that depicts the brutality inflicted on an innocent soul amid the bleak and dark destruction at the start of WWII.


The Painted Bird, still courtesy of IFC Films

“The Painted Bird” surprised audiences at festivals worldwide. Spectators who stayed in the theater appreciated its stunning and pristine 35mm black-and-white cinematography, poetic narrative, and exquisite portrayal of the early life of a vulnerable Jewish boy navigating the dangerous trenches of international conflict.

 

The stark images of child abuse, mutilation, rape, and human cruelty made some attendees walk out at the Venice, Toronto, and Chicago film festivals. Nonetheless, this piece of art was recognized with other prestigious awards, such as the Czech Lion for Best Picture and the UNICEF Award at the Venice Film Festival.

 

Set in several rural Eastern European locations, the intense three-hour Czech production is divided into nine suffocating chapters. Each segment is named after every adult who crosses the torturous path of this nameless six-year-old boy – Marta, Olga, Labina, Mitka, Miller, Priest & Garbos, and others. These troublesome and unruly peasants serve as guardians of the young boy’s faith.

 

Newcomer Petr Kotlar plays young Kotlar, who, without hesitation, carries the entire story with remarkable confidence.  


The Painted Bird, still courtesy of IFC Films


The boy’s journey starts with a powerful opening - a bullying scene where the villagers’ children burn his pet alive. When his Jewish father was escaping from the Germans, the family spread out - leaving the boy in the custody of a blind older woman. The matron’s sudden death preludes the poor boy’s martyrdom.


In the boy’s odyssey, each stop is a difficult encounter with oppression, abuse, severe physical pain, domestic violence, and sexual assault. 

To survive in a harsh world, the boy’s extraordinary mind enhances his power of observation. His resilience relies on his capacity to stay silent, just an observer of his own life.

The film was skillfully shot in chronological order over two years. This heroic love story allows viewers to see the boy’s natural growth, maturity, and development during his challenging journey.


The Painted Bird, still courtesy of IFC Films

The universality of “The Painted Bird” lies in its honest portrayal of religion that connects to all beliefs—including Judaism, Catholicism, Protestantism, and Atheism. In the film, faith correlates with Fascism from Nazi Germany and Soviet Communism from the former USSR. These political ideologies gambled with the lives of millions in Central Europe during the war.

 

The language spoken in the movie is ‘Interslavic’ or ‘Interslavic Esperanto,’ an international language used in several Eastern European countries, including Poland, Germany, and Russia.

 

Written by best-selling, award-winning author Jerzy Kosinski, the book was published in the United States in 1965. The story’s provocative subject matter leaves a haunting, lasting impression of discomfort on readers.

Initially, the writer hoped to have the most renowned international film directors of that era, such as Federico Fellini or Luis Buñuel, direct the adaptation of his literary work to the big screen, but the project never came to fruition.


Václav Marhoul, director of The Painted Bird. Photo: José Alberto Hermosillo, Festival in LA ©2019

It was only after Kosinski’s death by apparent suicide at age fifty-seven that Czech director Václav Marhoul visited a secluded Jewish community in Chicago to acquire the rights to the novel, which is considered a significant literary work about the Holocaust, comparable to Anne Frank: “The Diary of a Young Girl.”

 

Written in Manhattan, Kosinski based his personal story on his experiences in Poland. Due to the project's controversial content, the northern European country sought to distance itself from it. The director depicted the child’s journey south of the Polish border without naming a specific country, language, or even the boy’s name or surname.


The Painted Bird, still courtesy of IFC Films
The Painted Bird, still courtesy of IFC Films


Instead of focusing on the series of disgusting images, viewers should see the movie as a relevant document showing how low humanity can go under extreme circumstances.

 

For grown-up men and women suffering the horrors of war, the boy could be seen as an adult and perhaps as one of their own. They were protective and, at the same time, predatory. Humans tend to hurt what they love most and corrupt innocence with profane intentions and lower instincts, which is human nature. 


The Painted Bird, Hollywood reception. Photo: José Alberto Hermosillo, Festival in LA ©2019

Marhoul revealed at a small gathering in Hollywood that it took him ten years to create his ambitious project, including a whole year to secure the author’s rights. He hopes his film will stay in viewers’ minds and hearts for quite some time. It will because this film is extraordinary. The director’s style is thoroughly academic, and his honesty impeccable—comparable to Agnieszka Holland’s powerful Holocaust film “Europe Europe.


Symbolically, Catholics may interpret the boy’s journey as a struggle through the Seven Deadly Sins (Pride, Envy, Gluttony, Lust, Anger, Greed, and Sloth). The phrase “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth” appears frequently within each chapter. The film’s complexity accurately portrays a boy’s innocent life, the cruelty of his environment, and the historical events that surround him.


“The Painted Bird” is a film I could never forget for its originality and breathtaking images of agony and hope.


The Painted Bird Q&A. Photo: José Alberto Hermosillo, Festival in LA ©2019

“The Painted Bird” is one of the year’s most acclaimed films. As a result, the Czech Republic selected this remarkable production as its entry for Best International Feature Film at the Oscars. Later, the Academy named this drama among the top ten semifinalists.


This powerful film vividly portrays the horrors of war, the deceitfulness of human nature, and the physical and psychological harm inflicted on children in extreme circumstances. “The Painted Bird” is an actual work of art about the Holocaust - an exceptional achievement in modern cinema.


The international cast enhances the film’s haunting and heartbreaking impact. Notable actors include Harvey Keitel, Julian Sands, Stellan Skarsgård, Barry Pepper, Udo Kier, Nina Sunevic, and Jitka Cvncarová.

 

Viewers can complement this poignant film with other classic Holocaust movies such as “The Sound of Music,” “Schindler’s List,” “A Bag Full of Marbles,” or the satirical “Jojo Rabbit.” However, “The Painted Bird” is a hyper-realistic, provocative, and brief depiction of life in rural Europe at the end of the 1930s, dominated by ignorance, superstition, and poverty.

 

In this story, nothing is intentional; everything is circumstantial. Metaphorically, the title “The Painted Bird” comes from a scene where a bird breeder paints a bird’s feathers and then releases it. After the bird returns, its flock attacks and kills it. In the film, the young boy is that bird, and the paint symbolizes his instinct for survival. Adults represent his flock, willing to do anything to break his spirit.


Václav Marhoul, director of The Painted Bird. Film critic José Alberto Hermosillo, Festival in LA ©2019
Film critic José Alberto Hermosillo, Festival in LA ©2019

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Monday, December 16, 2019

Ten Shortlisted Films for Best International Feature Oscars 2020

By José Alberto Hermosillo
Ten Shortlisted Films for Best International Feature Film for the Oscars 2020. Festival in LA

TEN SHORTLISTED INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILMS PRE-SELECTED IN THE CATEGORY OF BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM:

The Czech Republic, “The Painted Bird”
Estonia, “Truth and Justice”
France, “Les Misérables”
Hungary, “Those Who Remained”
North Macedonia, “Honeyland
Poland, “Corpus Christi”
Russia, “Beanpole”
Senegal, “Atlantics”
South Korea, “Parasite
Spain, “Pain and Glory
A record number of 94 countries submitted their films to the 92nd Academy Awards for the Best International Feature Film, previously known as the Best Foreign Language category. 

Out of those 94 submissions, the one from Afghanistan was ineligible. Austria and Nigeria were disqualified because more than fifty percent of the dialog is in English. 

From that long list, ten films are shortlisted now, before the nominations announcement mid-January.  

Not many surprises as the frontrunner and top foreign box-office, Cannes winner “Parasite,” seem to be ahead of the other preselected films.

Not that fast, the favorite film not always wins the Oscar. It happened in 2009 with Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or winner “The White Ribbon” loosing against the undiscovered Argentinian political-thriller “The Secret in their Eyes,” both films are equally meaningful with extraordinary beauty.

Last year, the Venice Film Festival winner “Roma” from Mexico won the Oscar over Cannes winner Japanse social drama “Shoplifters.” And a year before the transgender Chilean love story “A Fantastic Woman” beat Cannes winner “The Square” from Sweden.

In history, very few films won the Palme d’Or and the Oscar as well. The last movie to do so was “Amour” in 2012. “Pele the Conqueror” won both in 1987, “The Thin Drum” in 1979. “A Man and a Woman” in 1966, “La Dolce Vita” from Italy won in 1960, and “Black Orpheus” made in Brazil, represented France in 1959, won Cannes and the Oscar.

Measuring art is subjective, but not for the Academy members who prefer a wide variety of topics than the ones that have won in the influential European Film Festivals.

The films from Latin America are out of the competition after winning the Oscar for two consecutive years, "A Fantastic Woman" from Chile, and "Roma" from Mexico. "Invisible Life," the masterwork from Brazil and "Retablo" from Peru, both films were nominated for Independent Spirit Awards, but after the shortlist announcement have no chance for an Oscar nomination.

This award season, anything can happen because the most controversial film of the year, "The Painted Bird" from the Czech Republic, made the cut. The eco-friendly documentary from North Macedonia's "Honeyland," or even "Beanpole" from Russia, can win over the three favorites, "Parasite" from South Korea, "Pain and Glory" from Spain, and "Les Misérables" from France. 


The Painted Bird, Czech Republic
Directed by Václav Marhoul.
Language: Interslavic. 
Truth and Justice, Estonia
Directed by Tanel Toon
Language: Estonia

Directed by Ladj Ly
Language: French.
Those Who Remained, Hungary
Directed by Barnabás Tóth
Language: Hungarian.
Honeyland, North Macedonia
Directed by Ljubomir Stefanov and Tamara Kotovska
Language: Turkish, Macedonian, Bosnian.
Corpus Christi, Poland
Directed by Jean Komasa 
Language: Polish

Beanpole, Russia
Directed by Kantermir Balagov
Language: Russian
Atlantics, Senegal
Directed by Mati Diop
Language: Wolof, French, English.
Parasite, South Korea
Directed by Bong Joon-ho
Language: Korean.
Directed by Pedro Almodovar
Language: Spanish.


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