23 January 2008

Le Grand Meaulnes

A film by Jean-Gabriel Albicocco

Le Grand Meaulnes (The Lost Domain) is one of the greatest French novels of the 20th century, the only novel of Alain-Fournier, a brilliant young writer killed in action in 1914 at the age of twenty-seven.

The story is a masterly exploration of the twilight world between boyhood and manhood, with its mixture of idealism, realism, and sheer caprice. But that is not its only magic – there is a magic of setting, of narrative, of the abject beauty of the heroine, of the inexplicable elusiveness of the 'lost domain' itself.

One night, at a party in a strange domain lost in the woods, Augustin Meaulnes is dazzled by the beauty of Yvonne de Galais, with whom he falls eternally in love. But when the party ends, the young woman seems to have vanished along with the château and its people, as if it had all been a dream fantasy. Despite the passage of time, Augustin Meaulnes will never regain the beautiful apparition.

The original film adaption by Jean-Gabriel Albicocco, released in 1967 and starring Brigitte Fossey, Jean Blaise and Alain Libolt, is a masterpiece of French cinema. Visually intensive throughout, the camera captures especially well the surrealistic experience at the mysterious party in the château into which Augustin stumbles, as in a dream.

21 January 2008

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress

A film by Dai Sijie

Based on the semi-autobiographical novel Balzac et la petite tailleuse chinoise by Dai Sijie, the story centres on two boys, Luo and Ma, university students from bourgeois backgrounds who are sent to a remote mountain village in Sichuan province for three years of re-education during the Cultural Revolution. Amid the physical and intellectual hardships they are forced to endure, both fall in love with a beautiful local girl, granddaughter of an old tailor and known to everyone as the Little Seamstress.

During these years of intellectual oppression, the three find solace and liberation in a secret cache of forbidden books by classic Western authors, among whom their favourite is Honoré de Balzac. In attempting to woo the Little Seamstress and to teach her of things she had never imagined, the students start a journey that will profoundly change her perspective on her world and theirs. An evocative and luminously shot paean to a time long past and to the realisation that change can bring freedom.

17 January 2008

The Remains of the Day

A film by James Ivory, based on the novel by Kazuo Ishiguro.

James Stevens, a meticulous and emotionally repressed man, is butler to Lord Darlington. His master is one of a number of misguided aristocratic diplomats who are trying to cultivate ties with the Nazi cause in post-WWI Britain. But Stevens's world of manners and decorum in the household he maintains is tested by the arrival of a new housekeeper, Miss Kenton, a high-spirited, strong-minded young woman who watches the goings-on upstairs with horror. Despite her apprehensions, she and Stevens gradually fall in love, though neither will admit it, and only give vent to their charged feelings via fierce arguments. Unfortunately, loyalty to his master causes Stevens to reject the delicate advances of Miss Kenton who eventually marries and moves away.

As the film opens in the 1950s, Stevens, now in the employ of a new master, reviews a lifetime of service at Darlington Hall. Realising his past mistakes and the wasted opportunities in his life, he contacts Miss Kenton in the hope of bringing her back to the house, and thus once more into his life.

A story of misguided loyalty, pride, and unrequited love. The tragedy of a man who pays the terrible price of denying his own feelings.

15 January 2008

The Hours

A film by Stephen Daldry, adapted from the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Michael Cunningham. Its name was also Virginia Woolf's working title of her novel Mrs Dalloway on which the story is based.

"Mrs Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself."

In 1920s London, Virginia Woolf is fighting against her rebellious spirit as she attempts to make a start on her new novel, a book which will set a trend in contemporary literature, the stream-of-consciousness novel.

Laura Brown, a young wife and mother, broiling in a suburb of 1940s Los Angeles, yearns to escape and read her precious copy of Mrs Dalloway, finding it so revelatory that she begins to consider making a devastating change in her life.

Clarissa Vaughan, a present-day version of Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, steps out of her smart Greenwich Village apartment in 1990s New York to buy flowers for a party she is hosting for a much loved friend who is dying of AIDS.

The Hours recasts the classic story of Woolf's Mrs Dalloway in a startling new light. Moving effortlessly across the decades and between England and America, this exquisite story follows the personal worlds of three unforgettable women. Their engaging stories intertwine until they come together in a surprising moment of shared recognition.

Dear Leonard —
To look life in the face
Always, to look life in the face
And to know it for what it is
At last, to know it
To love it for what it is
And then, to put it away

Leonard,
Always, the years between us
Always, the years
Always, the love
Always, the hours

10 January 2008

Travellers & Magicians

A film by Khyentse Norbu

Two men, two women, two journeys are woven into an intricate tapestry of desires as we are taken on an adventurous emotional tour through the heartland of Bhutanese Buddhist culture.

Travellers & Magicians, shot entirely in the tiny Buddhist Kingdom of Bhutan, tells the story of a young man who wants to leave behind his country with its quaint ways and simple joys to find a glamourous new life in America. He shares his journey across Bhutan with a group of travellers, including a monk, who annoys him with irritating truths hidden in a mystical story of magic, desire and murder. It is a multi-layered film, featuring a story within a story. Two men, one chasing love ends up in a dream. The other, chasing a dream, leaves love behind.

4 January 2008

Daughters of Wisdom

A film by Bari Pearlman

An intimate portrait of a rare and extraordinary spiritual community and the women who created it.

Situated on the Eastern Tibetan plateau north of the Himalayas, at an altitude of 14,000 feet, the Nangchen district of Kham is home to an estimated 60,000 subsistence farmers and nomadic herding families. Their way of life has changed little in over 2,000 years, and for most it is a life of illiteracy, poverty and hunger. Now, for the first time, the women of Nangchen are being given the chance to change the course of their lives, and to continue their rich spiritual legacy. Built with their own hands and always expanding, the Kala Rongo Monastery is home to nearly 300 nuns who study and practice full-time, creating new opportunities for themselves and for the community they serve.

Daughters of Wisdom is an intimate portrait of these nuns, who are receiving unprecedented educational and religious training, and preserving their rich cultural heritage even as they slowly reshape it. Some shy, some outspoken, all committed to the often difficult life they have chosen, the nuns graciously allowed the camera a never-before-seen glimpse into their vibrant spiritual community and insight into their extraordinary lives.