
The second great
find of this year’s festival for me (after Touching The Void)
is Lars Von Trier and Jorgen Leth’s documentary, The
Five Obstructions, which I consider the best film about filmmaking
I have seen… well… maybe ever. In many ways, it is the filmic version
of Steven Soderbergh’s book, "Getting Away With It",
which ironically, I brought with me on this journey to re-read. Both
are about personalities on the surface, but speak to the spirit of the
process of actually making films, not just deconstructing them afterwards
as we critics do or looking at it as a business process, or even as
a surface discussion about production.
The set up is this:
In 1968, Jorgen Leth made a movie called The Perfect Human.
This experimental-style short film is very close to von Trier’s heart.
As a result of that, his subsequent relationship with Leth and his own
artistic interest in shaking things up, he comes up with the idea of
getting Leth to remake The Perfect Human five times, each with
a set of obstructions. The obstructions obviously recall the Dogma 95
effort, but they are no Dogma rules. Each film has its own odd set of
obstructions with goals stated ahead in meetings between Leth and von
Trier before each production begins.
The result is significant
on various levels. And I don’t want to tell you how to feel about it.
But as someone who is always looking for new ways of explaining the
process of creating art – especially to one fellow journalist in particular
– this is a spectacular study. The film industry – Hollywood – and those
of us who follow it have created a retched mess by forcing the idea
that film is a medium that is a one-off, never meant to be reconsidered.
Yes, there are remakes aplenty. But the reason for most of them is money
and little more.
Film, the most complex
of all art forms, can be very much like literature or theater. Like
Shakespeare’s plays, many films can be launching points for films that
reflect on the original works, surpassing them, falling behind them
or simply adding more ideas to the existing ideas. There is nothing
wrong with that. Quite the opposite.
But on top of that,
there is process. Very few people really understand the process of making
a film and the many choices that are made. By creating this odd process
in which he sets up rules/obstructions for Leth to deal with, von Trier
forces Leth to do what a good artist does all the time… to deal with
the situation, to rethink, to make adjustments, and to keep reflecting
his own voice, regardless of the circumstances.
I fully expect that
The 5 Obstructions will be a key element of every film school
curriculum for a long, long time. In fact, I would make it the first
thing that every film school student sees at the start of each year
of studies, as like all great art, its meaning will change for them
every year.
My experience with
von Trier this festival has been lovely, very reminiscent of meeting
Mike Figgis years ago, finding the genius guy who was sitting
there regardless of how I feel about his work. I’ve liked some of Figgis’
work since, but I still admire the art and effort of his work more than
some of the outcome. I have never liked a von Trier film deeply. Not
even the much revered Breaking The Waves. I find him cruel and
misogynistic… even, more so because he has made women heroines in almost
all of his works… and they have all suffered for the distinction.
by
David Poland