Anlässlich der vierteiligen Serie „Streetscapes“, die im With the four-part “Streetscapes” series showing at this year’s Forum, director Heinz Emigholz and
diesjährigen Forum zu sehen ist, trafen sich der Regisseur Forum head Christoph Terhechte met at the Akademie der Künste at Hanseatenweg, one of the key
Heinz Emigholz und Forumsleiter Christoph Terhechte in screening venues for Forum and Forum Expanded. They spoke about framing and editing in architec-
der Akademie der Künste am Hanseatenweg, einem der ture films, the Akademie building and the necessity of research trips.
zentralen Spielorte von Forum und Forum Expanded. Sie
sprachen über Framing und Schnitt im Architekturfilm, » The interview can be found in English at http://www.arsenal-berlin.de/en/berlinale-for um/mag azin/inter view-
Träume, das Gebäude der Akademie und die Notwen- with-heinz-emigholz.html
digkeit von Recherchereisen.
In Streetscapes [Dialogue] hast du ein Gespräch mit Euer Gespräch kreist auch um die Frage der kreativen
dem Psychoanalytiker Zohar Rubinstein in der Kulisse der Blockade und um die Kraft, die es braucht, ein Werk fertig-
Bauten von Eladio Dieste und anderen reinszeniert. Der zustellen. Was hat dich dazu gebracht, vier Filme auf einmal
amerikanische Schauspieler John Erdman tritt als Filmema- auf den Weg zu bringen?
cher auf und der argentinische Regisseur Jonathan Perel als » Es sind ja vier Filme, die im Laufe von drei Jahren her-
Analytiker. War das Gespräch von vornherein als eine Art gestellt worden sind. Ich hatte 2+2=22 [The Alphabet]
Drehbuch geplant? schon im Oktober 2013 gedreht, nur wusste ich dann nicht,
» Nein. Diese Idee hat sich erst während des fünftägigen wie es weiter geht, und dann ist er liegengeblieben. Durch
Gespräches herauskristallisiert. Das ist das Merkwürdige an das Gespräch mit Zohar ergab sich plötzlich die Lösung,
diesem Film: der Regisseur kommt während des Gesprä- wie die Filme ineinandergreifen konnten. Natürlich ist der
ches darauf, den Film zu machen, den wir sehen. Da findet Dialog mit dem Analytiker der Schlüssel zu den anderen
eine Inversion von Zeit statt. Der Film stellt einen Prozess Filmen. Ich habe den Dialog zusammengestrichen auf The-
dar, den man eigentlich nicht darstellen kann. Ich hatte men des Filmemachens. Ich hatte 260 Seiten, davon sind
Zohar allerdings gefragt, ob etwas dagegen spricht, dass 60 übriggeblieben. Die Grundstruktur ist eine Analyse des
ich unser Gespräch aufnehme, da ich Filmemachens, die selbst zu einem Film wird. Meine Ar-
Angst hatte, etwas davon zu vergessen. chitekturfilme wurden ja oft dafür kritisiert, dass sie keinen
Das spricht natürlich gegen eine ana- Text haben, dass sie zwar die Räume zeigen, aber nichts
lytische Praxis. Da ihm klar war, dass erklären. Das findet jetzt in diesem dritten Film statt. In
wir keine klassische Analyse machen, Streetscapes [Dialogue] erzählt der Filmemacher, was er
sondern eine Intervention oder einen überhaupt sinnvoll findet am Filmemachen. Insofern erklä-
„Marathon“, wie er es nannte, hatte er ren sich diese Filme gegenseitig.
nichts dagegen.
Deine Architekturfilme hast du unter der Überschrift „Pho-
tographie und jenseits“ zusammengefasst. Warum Fotogra-
fie und nicht Kinematografie?
» Ich mache das Framing, und während ich das Bild ein-
richte, kümmert sich Till Beckmann um die Technik, damit
ein durchgezeichnetes Bild dabei herauskommt. Das Fra-
ming ist für mich ein fotografischer Akt: den Ausschnitt
festzulegen im Wissen, was man noch filmen wird oder
schon gefilmt hat. Das ist eine kinematografische Entschei-
Leviathan and the accompanying installations Canst Thou Draw Out Leviathan with a Hook? by Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel were shown at the 2013
Forum Expanded
h t t p : / / w w w. a r s e n a l - b e r l i n . d e / d e / b e r l i n a l e - f o r u m /
m a g a z i n / s e n s o r y - e t h n o g r a p h y - l a b. h t m l
fauna emitting sounds which echo and reverberate through bolic graveyard, a kind of museum in which otherwise ran- brewing here in the desert. Making a sudden turn to the
the atmosphere, Bonnetta conducted an interview with a dom items memorialize the journeys taken, or irretrievable poetic after what has thus far been a very direct, materialist
man who lives in close proximity to the Salton Sea. He lives. We see water bottles, jackets, jeans, eyeglasses, cell- film, Part 3 is accompanied on the soundtrack by a reading
speaks of losing all his possessions and several beloved pets phones, and towards the end of Part 2, lost IDs. Each of that consists of portions of various poems by Sor Juana
in a house fire. these objects corresponds to a person, a synecdoche of loss. Inés de la Cruz.
We hear other people as well, but only in the background, At the start of Part 2, we follow a figure navigating through Sor Juana, the great Mexican poet, is represented in El mar
as part of the overall landscape. The visual element of Lago the dark with a homemade torch. Almost all we see is a la mar by lines that suggest both the crisis of a contested
shows us an individual wandering through this desolate hand, a rolled-up piece of what looks like burning leather, landscape and the human tragedy of cultural misunder-
space, and serves as a rather direct link between this earlier and an undulating flame. Later, we follow a man from be- standing:
work and El mar la mar. Titled “Land of Thin Air,” the hind as he negotiates that same expanse of desert in equally
video shows a figure crossing the stretch of desert after pitch-black conditions. But as he bobs in and out of the “A landscape still unknown
dusk. In the midnight blue, we see a hill in the distance, and filmmakers’ night-vision, we notice his camouflage outfit Where night may fall while day is at the noon
a dozen or so tufts of dry brush. As the man crosses this and, finally, his rifle. Within the first fifteen minutes, the in the quietude
field, the white light of his lantern is a tiny white dot not filmmakers have laid out the fundamental conflict of the of this silent kingdom
much bigger than a pixel. It bisects the screen at its exact situation. only muted voices could be heard
midpoint. Bonnetta and Sniadecki are clearly on the side of the im- These two artificial mountains
We don’t see many people crossing the desert in El mar la migrants. These are the people who are risking their lives Sorrowful signs of which today
mar. This is by design, of course. Bonnetta and Sniadecki for opportunities that some have only through an accident are the many tongues that weaken
are working to protect the identities of those who have ta- of birth. But El mar la mar gives the border patrol agents a the peace among people”
ken the great risk of entering the United States without pro- voice as well; they are depicted with respect and even-hand-
per documentation. But we do see a few such figures, their edness. Some of them express compassion for the people Toward the end of the recitation, we hear lines that seem
features obscured by camera angle or relative distance. One they’re charged with capturing, while others see it as a kind to speak directly to the experience of those crossing the
such image occurs at the 68-minute mark of El mar la mar, of cat-and-mouse game. “They’re trying to avoid you,” says Sonoran Desert:
and rhymes almost exactly with the single-shot construct- one man, “and you can see ‘em.” He seems to delight in
ion of “Land of Thin Air.” the immigrants’ failure to evade U.S. Homeland Security’s “The sun-worn traveler
Across a flat desert landscape at sunset, we see a person sil- high-tech surveillance equipment and firepower. dazed and footsore
houetted against the sky, crossing from the left side of the Within the context of this battle, Bonnetta and Sniadecki no intimation
screen to the right. In this context, we can safely assume show us scenes that would otherwise be benign. We’re giv- no sign, of grace shade or shadow”
that this person is negotiating some portion of the treach- en the chance to observe the landscape of the Southwest,
erous Sonoran Desert, quite possibly struggling to survive. with its pink and purple sunsets, low hills and mesas, and Although they end their film with the poem by Sor Juana,
But most of El mar la mar isn’t even as direct as this. The unique desert flora. Making the most of low-light expo- Bonnetta and Sniadecki take the title of their film from
film is a fragmented, multi-perspectival examination of sures and the thick grain of 16mm film, the directors ar- another poet, the Spaniard Rafael Alberti. “El mar, la mar”
this stretch of land as a contested space, a place where lives ticulate the Sonoran Desert as a vast expanse generative of is the first line of his “Song,” a short work in which the
are risked and lost and multiple interests struggle for vari- flat, painterly spaces, the sort that Georgia O’Keeffe pop- speaker laments to his father the fact of having left his
ous forms of dignity and control. As with other SEL docu- ularized. These scenes, together with long takes of trains, beloved sea for the city. “Father,” the final stanza pleads,
mentaries such as Yumen and Sweetgrass, this is a spatial skies, and the movement of water, suggest the influence of “why did you bring me here?”
study, a work of anthropological cinema operating on the James Benning, another filmmaker devoted to making the Although El mar la mar makes no extra-titular reference
assumption that intersecting forces define comprehensible social and political dimensions of the American landscape to Alberti’s poem, it haunts the film like a secondary quest-
space. visible through broader context. ion, one that’s maybe impossible to ask. Men, women, and
The first part of El mar la mar, “Rio,” is abstract yet direct. In fact, the final section of El mar la mar strikes me as the children risk their lives every single day to make it to the
In wavering, unstable focus, the frame is filled with green moment when the film makes its most direct contact with United States. Once here, they are liable to be exploited,
trees and rusty fence posts. The posts are tall and thin, the vernacular of the avant-garde. We see four shots of the discriminated against, shunted into substandard housing,
installed at strict intervals, and the camera depicts them empty landscape, this time in black and white. The film and now, under President Trump, constantly threatened
moving quickly from right to left, photographed from a grain is dense and swirling and we can see that a storm is with arrest, deportation, and being separated from their
speeding car. This produces a flicker effect, as if we’re see- family members. So once
ing the landscape through an old optical toy such as a phen- these brave people have
akistoscope. As the shot goes on, the road veers away from survived the journey, what
and back toward the fence, and we get a clearer look at this awaits them? The child of
barrier. We can tell from context that it is a fence plan- an immigrant might reason-
ted along the Rio Grande, and that the scene is being shot ably pose Alberti’s question
from a border town road, most likely in Arizona. to their father or mother,
It seems fairly pointed for Sniadecki and Bonnetta to begin and find their answer want-
their film in this manner, especially since the river will not ing. What happens then? It’s
feature heavily in El mar la mar. This is a project that the entirely in keeping with the
filmmakers have been working on for over two years, but openness of El mar la mar,
has only now reached completion in the wake of Donald and the gestural, non-expos-
Trump’s U.S. election victory. So everything we see in the itory impulse of the SEL,
remaining 90 minutes explicitly unfolds within the context that the film’s primary ques-
of the supposed border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, tion should remain one that
the centerpiece of Trump’s campaign and the key symbol is, strictly speaking, outside
of his isolationist foreign policy. the reach of its own running
Much of the central section of El mar la mar, “Costas,” time. It’s a question to which
consists of still shots of various objects lost along the way only the future can attend.
from Mexico to the U.S. The desert is shown to be a sym- El mar la mar by Joshua Bonnetta, J.P. Sniadecki
have the potential to narrate the world in new ways – to those who
address them, who must then pass the story on.
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» Die deutsche Übersetztung dieses Artikels finden Sie auf der Seite http://www.arsenal-berlin.de/de/berlinale-forum/magazin/
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An archive scene: a researcher opens a file and discovers a document “Heritage” is a cultural policy term, of “Kulturpolitik”, to use the Ger-
about the life of an actor she has just seen in a film on a Steenbeck. She man term, for after all, it was Bismarck who invented it. “Heritage” » Stefanie Schulte Strathaus is the head of Forum
is enthusiastic about her finding, digs deeper, puts together her own file. presupposes a collective “we”: a group with specific features, a shared Expanded, one of the co-directors of Arsenal – Institute
The deeper she digs, the more familiar the person she is researching origin, a shared future, which springs from a shared language or eth- for Film and Video Art and initiator of the Living Archive
becomes to her, the more alive the actor comes. Later, when she talks nicity, or from other identity traits. The term “heritage” creates a spe- project at Arsenal.
to the head of the archive, she is surprised to learn that not only does the head cific “we” which lays claim to the unspecific inheritance that the archive con-
1
of the archive not know about the documents and the contents of that file. The
head of the archive doesn’t even know about the actor. The researcher is sur-
3
tains. It substantialises the addressee of the archive and combines the address
of the archive with an operation of exclusion and inclusion. Once the contents
» Vinzenz Hediger is a film scholar and professor at the
Goethe Universität Frankfurt. His above theses were writ-
prised to learn that not everyone knows what she is finding in the archive, since of the archive become “heritage”, some people have a specific title to its con- ten for the occasion of the opening of the Arsenal archive
the record is there for everyone to see. The head of the archive was supposed tents, and others don’t. But there is the heritage of humanity! Das Kulturerbe at silent green Kulturquartier.
to know! der Menschheit! You will object. Of course. But that still excludes non-humans.
“L’autre supposé croire” is how a philosopher described, in the words of Lacan, » The 5th edition of the Think Film conference with the
the structure of ideology. Everyone believes that everyone else believes, with- Turning the impersonal inheritance of the archive’s knowledge into title “Archival Constellations“ takes place on February 16
out believing herself. “L’autre supposé savoir” is how we could describe the the very personal entitlement to a “heritage” has political advant- from 10am to 10pm at silent green.
knowledge of the archive: We assume that everyone knows, even though we ages – after all, it is a cultural policy operation. Once the archive has a
don’t know. In fact, nobody really knows. Or, more precisely: Only the archive substantial addressee, we can go and raise money to sustain the archive
knows. The ignorance of the head of the archive is sur-prising to the excited in the name of this specific, identifiable addressee. It’s easier to raise
neophyte researcher, but it is not shameful. She is not the guardian of the know- money for Das Deutsche Filmerbe than for an archive that just contains know-
ledge inside the archive. She is the guardian of our ignorance about what is
inside the archive.
4
ledge addressed to no one in particular. But we should remain aware of the fact
that this is a political operation. We still need, not just a “politique des auteurs”,
but a “politique des archives”. And we need archives which contain more than
Archives have an address. They are addressed to anyone in particular, just heritage: Archives that bequeath knowledge to no one in particular, at any-
and to everyone who enters them. The archive interpellates the re- one’s asking.
searcher: It turns the researcher into the addressee of the archive. The
archive bequeaths its knowledge to the researcher. Research, in that
• The Law of the Pursuer by Amos Gitai, SAVVY Contemporary (Israel/Germany) – Image # 1
sense, is always a form of inheriting something for which one has no • Production still of Me and Others by Felix Sobolev (found at Aleksandr Dovzhenko and exhibited at Kinotron, Ukraine) – Image # 2
specific title, yet which is available for anyone’s asking. The archive bequeaths • Subkultur Berlin 80, archived by !K7, Germany – Image # 3
2
something to no one in particular, and to anyone. •
•
Archive Stills (produced and archived by Mosireen Collective, Internet) – Image # 4
Shaihu Umar by Adamu Halilu, 1976 (found at National Film, Video and Sound Archives, Nigeria) – Image # 5
• Ronny und Harun spielen Theater, 1982 (filmed at the Delphi theatre and found by Harun Farocki Institut, Germany) – Image # 6
• Living Archive (Arsenal - Institut für Film und Videokunst, Germany) – Image # 7
• Ivanov Boarding School (unknown source found at the INCA, Guinea Bissau) – Image # 8
• Camera in Gun Forest, photographer: Hani Jowaharieh, 1969 © WAFA agency collection, selected by Subversive Film (Palestine) – Image # 9
• Wutharr, Saltwater Dreams (The Karrabing Film Collective, Australia) – Image # 10
• Rising Stars, Falling Stars – Sweet 16mm, Never Been Kissed (performed by Vaginal Davis, Germany) – Image # 11
• State Film Company (PFN) lab (found by Lab Labalaba, Indonesia) – Image # 12
dung, aber gleichzeitig denke ich, dass jedes einzelne Bild so gedreht und dachte, das ist eine notwendige, aber auch sim- auch die verschiedenartigen Bauaufgaben: soziale Bauten,
konzentriert komponiert sein muss, dass es für sich selbst ple Idee, Häuser zu betreten und zu zeigen, wie die Räume Kulturhäuser, Brücken, Ingenieursbauten. Brücken interes-
stehen kann. Also nicht nur ein Füllbild oder Schnittbild sich entfalten. Ich dachte, da muss es schon tausend Filme sieren mich, aber ich möchte nicht unter einer leben.
sein, oder wie man das so nennt beim Filmemachen. Das geben. Aber es gab keine. Ich will das doofe Wort Allein-
ist eine kompositorische Anstrengung, die auch in der Fo- stellungsmerkmal nicht verwenden, aber das, was du Bran- Träumst du manchmal Architektur?
tografie zu finden ist. Hier kommt allerdings das Element ding nennst, hat sich aus der Logik, wie ich auf die Räume » Ja, stark, das ist mein nächstes Projekt. Da geht es um
Zeit hinzu. Die Dauer und der Schnitt, der ja immer ein eingehe, ergeben. Jeder erlebt den Raum anders. die Grammatik des Traumes, um Zeitsprünge, um inversi-
science-fiction-hafter Eingriff ist in die Zeitkonstruktion. ve Zeit, um die Abbrüche im Erleben eines Traumes, die
Wenn ich dich mit der Hauptfigur von Streetscapes [Di- Nichtwiederholbarkeit eines Traumes. Und Architekturen
Das Framing deiner Architekturfilme hat sich quasi zum alogue], der natürlich ein Spielfilm ist, gleichsetzen darf, haben immer auch als bedrohliche Konstruktionen in mei-
Markenzeichen entwickelt. Architekturfotografie ist meist dann beschreibst du dich als Nomaden, der ebensogut in nen Träumen eine große Rolle gespielt. Darauf bin ich auch
wesentlich konservativer als deine Weise, Räume fotogra- einem Hotelzimmer in Montevideo sein kann wie in Ber- im Gespräch mit Zohar Rubinstein eingegangen.
fisch zu erfassen. lin, an das es keine wirkliche Bindung gibt. Architektur
» Zum einen ging das aus den Spielfilmen hervor. Die setzt doch das Gegenteil voraus. Ob es öffentliche Archi- Wie triffst du deine Wahl der Architekten, deren Bauten
Wiese der Sachen und Der Zynische Körper haben sich schon tektur ist wie die Akademie der Künste, wo wir uns befin- sich deine Filme widmen? Ich erinnere mich an eine Be-
schwer mit Architektur beschäftigt. Nur, dass da noch den, oder Wohnarchitektur: Bauten sind unverrückbar, sie gegnung in Buenos Aires, wo das Festival Bafici in einer
Schauspieler rumliefen und irgendwas erzählten. Aber ich wollen eine Heimstatt schaffen. ehemaligen Markthalle stattfand, einer Betonarchitektur,
wollte aus diesem Zusammenhang Vordergrund-Hinter- » Ich habe manchmal Fantasien: Wie wäre es, wenn ich die dich fasziniert hat.
grund raus. Der sogenannte Hintergrund war für mich in diesem Haus, das ich jetzt filme, lebte? Manchmal ist » Vom Architekten Viktor Sulčič hatte ich nie vorher ge-
genauso wichtig wie der Vordergrund. Als ich die Schau- das sogar eine schreckliche Vorstellung. Architektur hat so hört. Nachdem ich das Gebäude gesehen hatte, habe ich
spieler weggelassen habe, konnte ich mich dem Raum na- vielfältige Aufgaben. Nehmen wir Bickels’ Kibbuz-Archi- mich ins dortige Stadtarchiv begeben und geguckt, was der
türlich noch viel mehr hingeben. Alle Räume haben eine tektur: In so einem Zusammenhang hätte ich auch gern alles gebaut hat in Buenos Aires. Das habe ich mir dann al-
bestimmte Sprache, und man hat ein bestimmtes Gespür gelebt. Aber dieser Zusammenhang existiert kaum noch les angeschaut. So kommt das zustande. Ich folge ja keinem
dafür. Man nähert sich den Räumen an, natürlich auch auf oder noch nicht wieder. Was ich interessant finde an den Lehrbuch, „Die wichtigsten Architekturen der Welt“ oder
der Tonebene, und stellt seinen Körper quasi in den Raum. vielen Architekturen, die ich jetzt im Kopf habe, das ist, so. Ich liebe komplizierte Räume, und einige Architekten
Die Fotografie ergibt sich darüber, wie ich auf diesen Raum dass ich mich hinlegen kann und sagen: Jetzt erinnere ich können das bauen und andere nicht. Ich liebe nicht die Fas-
reagiere. Ich habe ja nicht das Problem der Architekturfo- mich mal genau, wie es da und da war. Das ist wie Urlaub sadenkünstler, sondern konstruktives Bauen. Ich hatte eine
tografie, dass ich alles in drei Bildern erfassen muss. Ich im Gehirn – dank dieser seltsamen Kapazität, die das Ge- Liste von Vorlieben. Die habe ich abgearbeitet, doch dann
habe eine Sequenz und kann viel diffiziler Räume wieder hirn hat, sich Räume wieder hervorzurufen. Das hat was kamen immer neue dazu, wie zum Beispiel Bickels oder
zusammensetzen. Du nennst es ein Markenzeichen, aber Beruhigendes. Mich interessieren aber, gerade im Verhält- Sulčič, die ich vorher gar nicht kannte. Ich gucke mir natür-
vorher gab es solche Filme gar nicht. Die ersten wurden nis zum Film, sehr verschiedenartige Konstruktionen und lich auch Fotografien an, ehe ich auf Recherchereise gehe,
im Forum 2001 gezeigt. Ich habe die in den 1990er Jahren nicht das eine Traumhaus, das für mich gebaut ist. Und und oft erkenne ich die Häuser von den Bildern gar nicht
4. The Future
It’s always been difficult to know what we’re talking about
when we talk about Argentinian cinema. The universal qual-
ity we touch on in parts of this text once again proves that
true filmmakers seem capable of transcending borders and
» Eine deutsche Übersetzung dieses Artikels sowie den spanischen Originaltext finden Sie auf der Seite
h t t p : / / w w w. a r s e n a l - b e r l i n . d e / d e / b e r l i n a l e - f o r u m / m a g a z i n / f u e r - e i n - k o s m i s c h e s - k i n o . h t m l
» There are works that benefit from not straints that its reels could even be projected in different
being understood. « orders (an idea and narrative style borrowed from Julio
- Simon Leys Cortázar’s novel Rayuela (Hopscotch)) and its audience could
go out for a smoke or to the bathroom and still return to the
Fernando Birri is a very a well-known figure, often more experience. An experimental fiction film with highly original
so than his films. He founded important film schools in ideas about the use of sound, photography, and the belief
Argentina and Cuba and, after studying in Italy, produced that madness and rigor could go hand in hand, a film that
films that helped shape an entire era, such as Tire Dié (Toss challenged all established notions of shooting and editing.
Me a Dime) (1960) and Los inundados (Flooded Out) (1962). As befitting the times, ORG was accompanied by a mani-
And although the success of his later work never lived up festo that spoke of “coSmunism, a cosmic communism for
to that of his early films, his name continued to be associ- a cinema cosmic, delirious and working class.” In short, a
ated with what was termed “New Latin American Cinema.” film full of contradictions, the delirious, free and egotistical
This is a fate shared by many directors, whereby one or two work of a realist director who had until then espoused cine-
successful films end up obscuring the rest of their filmogra- ma as a social tool and now encouraged viewers to leave the
phies. Yet ORG (whose title is now associated with Internet cinema if they did not like the film, because, in this case at
domains, but which originally alluded to the words organ, least, the audience was not important.
orgasm, and orgy) is more than just a forgotten film. It’s a ORG remains a strange object to this day, yet it is still
film that even seems to surpass the writer’s most famous a testament to its time. It feels like a science fiction B-movie
work and perhaps even his ideas on cinema. In the words starring Guy Debord, at once incorporating the standard
of Birri himself: “It’s the only film I ever made for myself.” assumptions of the time while also being a staggering
The synopsis of the film, a truly bizarre adaptation expression of freedom. After all these years, ORG remains a
of Thomas Mann’s The Transposed Heads, gives us an idea mystery about which so much more can be said and written,
of its outlandish plot (the challenge to the audience: try to a mystery full of contradictions relating to film history and,
follow the narrative), but merely acts as a kind of guide for to an even greater extent, to its own director’s films and
all the many other excessive ingredients that make up ORG. ideals. How many films can you say the same thing about?
Ten Mornings Ten Evenings and One Horizon von Tomonari Nishikawa
Philosophie der
Landschaft
„Denn wie wir unter Stimmung eines Menschen das Einheitliche ver-
stehen, das dauernd oder für jetzt die Gesamtheit seiner seelischen Ein-
zelinhalte färbt, nicht selbst etwas Einzelnes, oft auch nicht an einem
Einzelnen angebbar haftend, und doch das Allgemeine, worin all dies
Einzelne jetzt sich trifft – so durchdringt die Stimmung der Landschaft
alle ihre einzelnen Elemente, oft ohne dass man ein einzelnes für sie haft-
bar machen könnte; in einer schwer bezeichenbaren Weise hat ein jedes
an ihr teil – aber sie besteht weder außerhalb dieser Beiträge, noch ist sie
aus ihnen zusammengesetzt.
Diese eigentümliche Schwierigkeit, die Stimmung einer Land-
schaft zu lokalisieren, setzt sich in eine tiefere Schicht mit der Frage fort:
inwieweit die Stimmung der Landschaft in ihr selbst, objektiv, begründet
sei, da sie doch ein seelischer Zustand sei und deshalb nur in dem Ge-
fühlsreflex des Beschauers, nicht aber in den bewusstlos äußeren Dingen
wohnen könne? Und diese Probleme kreuzen sich in dem, das uns hier
eigentlich angeht: wenn die Stimmung ein wesentliches oder vielleicht
das wesentliche Moment ist, das die Teilstücke zu der Landschaft als
einer empfundenen Einheit zusammenbringt – wie kann das sein, da
doch die Landschaft gerade erst, wenn sie als Einheit erschaut ist, und
nicht vorher, in der bloßen Summe disparater Stücke, eine ‘Stimmung’ Tinselwood von Marie Voignier
besitzt?“
I’ve been asked to talk about film, not moving images in don’t mind. Compared to many filmmakers, I lack commit-
general, but the photomechanical invention of the late ment to the medium. I love celluloid. But I’m not devotion- » Deborah Stratman is an artist and filmmaker who has
nineteenth century. al. I have shot on VHS, Hi-8, MiniDV and HD as often as worked on both celluloid and video. Her last feature-length
I’ve shot using an Aaton or CP16 or Bolex. Not only does work The Illinois Parables was shot on 16mm and was
We think of such things as belonging to the past, but an each different camera have its own peculiar ergonomics – a shown at last year’s Forum Expanded.
anachronism belongs to any period other than that in which weight on the shoulder or a balance in the hand that pro-
it exists, which could just as well be the future. As an artist duces a unique cadence of shooting – but each medium » Numerous titles at this year’s Forum and Forum
already invested in making artwork vis-à-vis manipulating does too. To me, the varying speeds at which the process Expanded programmes also work with film, primarily
time, it’s appealing to compound that impulse by working unfolds are seductive. I find film to be deliriously slow. A 16mm. These include Ann Carolin Renninger and René
in a medium slightly transplanted from its native era. We slow to get lost in. A slow that takes me to planes of figuring Frölke’s Aus einem Jahr der Nichtereignisse (From a
call ourselves filmmakers, but maybe timemaker would be and reverie that diverge from digital methods, which are Year of Non-Events), Daniel Borgmann’s At Elske Pia
more appropriate. Of course there are artists today who are, faster, more improvisational, spry, almost conversational. (Loving Pia), El mar la mar by Joshua Bonnetta and J.P.
quite literally speaking, filmmakers. They mix up their own Sniadecki, Casa Roshell by Camila José Donoso, Golden
emulsions and paint them onto perforated plastic strips, Quite a few artists shoot analogue and post-produce digi- Exits by Alex Ross Perry, Aapothkalin Trikalika (The
which get loaded into intermittently moving machines and tally, but what it means to work in film can stretch beyond Kali of Emergency) by Ashish Avikunthak as well as
exposed to light, then hand-processed in buckets and tanks. capture. We might also edit mechanically, using rewinds, or short films by Peter Miller, Tomonari Nishikawa, Fern
I don’t personally work this way, but admire many artists a flatbed. I suffer less eyestrain sitting in front of a screen Silva, Anja Dornieden and Juan David González Monroy,
who do; the way they remove themselves from the labs and that’s rear illuminated by light passing through transparen- Chris Gehman, Duncan Campbell and Bernd Lützeler.
print stock companies which the rest of us must contend cies and bouncing off a mirror than I do staring at a com-
with. Like living off grid, their self-reliance harbors an anar- puter monitor. I like the heat and sound and pulse of the
chic urge to divest from corporate infrastructures. Add to Steenbeck. I like having lengths of film dangling off hooks
that the magic of chemistry, and they’re the envy of any into a bin. The spatiotemporal becomes so concrete. But
alchemist who ever sought to transmutate forms. I can’t stand cutting sound on magnetic film. It’s awful to
work with only two tracks. I do transfer a bit of audio to
To work and think in a medium alienated from its own era mag just to have something to sketch with, but I properly
makes me think of Darko Suvin’s 1968 formula for science massage the soundtrack into existence using software.
fiction, when he declared cognition and estrangement to
be the genre’s necessary and sufficient conditions. Perhaps There’s a kind of longing that lies in the world of touch;
the anachronistic task of composing with 16mm partially an intelligence of the hand, of repetition, in the suite of
explains the interest of so many contemporary film artists gestures that joins these plastic bits. I don’t attach value
with science fiction, and the work of JG Ballard and Robert judgments to the discrete labor of guillotining and taping,
Smithson. I admit they’re important touchstones for my- versus typing commands into a keyboard. I just ascribe dif-
self as well. Octavia Butler, Johanna Russ, Samuel Delaney, ference. In the end, the automatism of process, analog or
James Tiptree Jr., Edwin Abbot Abbot, JH Rosny aîné – digital, embeds itself into the final work and becomes as
these writers critique contemporary conditions (social, eco- much a part of the film’s genetics as shadow or rhythm or
nomic, environmental) by transposing the setting of a story color or plot. Part of the reason I alternate between med-
to a vaguely familiar or abstracted non-present. iums is to bring about a diversification of filmic species. » Die deutsche Übersetztung dieses Artikels finden
Sometimes the urge is reactionary, just to work against a Sie auf der Seite h t t p : / / w w w. a r s e n a l - b e r l i n .
I don’t choose to shoot on film because of the medium’s process I’ve been subsumed by and am weary of. Other de/de/berlinale-for um/mag azin/zur-ma-
predisposition towards sci-fi, though that’s a symptom I times the switch is about de-skilling. I choose a method I’m t e r i a l i t a e t - vo n - f i l m . h t m l
And what else can film bring us? Well for one, imperfection.
Imperfection and absence. The very conditions of desire.
Formed by an irregular swarm of grain, filmic images are
constitutionally atmospheric. They breathe. Aerated by mil-
lions of irresolute points, film magnetizes our gaze, which
is evolutionarily disposed to dart towards movement. Film
brings intermittence. By way of the sewing machine, we get
the beautiful Maltese cross mechanism, which translates
continuous motion into one of periodic stops and starts.
Cinema gives us gaps, it remembers through subtraction.
Casting:
Camera Threat von Bernd Lützeler
Die hier untersuchte spezifische Konstellation des Castings ten Foucault’schen Sinne) noch unbekannten (Regie-)Macht
erscheint als eine Vorform der Probe: „Casting“ als erzäh- und verwandelt sich so zu einer Allegorie des Begriffs eines » Constanze Ruhm ist Videokünstlerin, Kuratorin
lerisches Motiv und als Methode der Inszenierung zeigt “Subjekts auf Probe” in einem bloß geliehenen Leben. Und und Professorin für Digitale Medien an der Akademie
sich (wie auch in anderer Hinsicht die Form des Making-of) mehr noch als im Verfahren der Probe kristallisiert sich im der Bildenden Künste Wien.
als ein Subgenre und zugleich als deren radikalisierte Ver- Casting als einem inszenatorischen Mittel der Darstellung Viele ihrer Arbeiten waren im Forum Expanded zu
sion, in der die Beziehung von Regie und Schauspiel, von ein Bild der Produktion von Fiktion – und so nicht zuletzt sehen, zuletzt war sie dort 2013 mit Kalte Probe ver-
treten.
Deutungsmacht und Darstellung anhand der Frage nach von der Fiktion einer (prekären) Identität: Denn während
Machtverhältnissen und Selbstermächtigung, Dominanz sich der ontologische Status der Darsteller(innen)subjekte » Nicolas Wackerbarths Casting feiert in diesem
und Unterwerfung (dies bisweilen auch unter sexualisier- in der klassischen Film- oder Theaterprobe (zumindest vo- Jahr seine Weltpremiere im Forum. Der Spielfilm be-
ten Aspekten) zugespitzt wird. Die Konstellation des Cas- rübergehend, im Rahmen der ihnen bereits zugewiesenen leuchtet den Castingprozess eines Fassbinder-Rema-
tings verschärft diese Fragestellungen nicht zuletzt durch Rollen) mehr oder weniger “in Sicherheit” befindet, geht es kes fürs Fernsehen, bei dem sich die Regisseurin für
den Umstand, dass hier der Übergang zwischen Leben und beim Casting zuallererst darum, die für die Rolle am geeig- keine Hauptdarstellerin entscheiden kann. Der Regis-
Kunst, Mensch und Figur über den Weg der Darstellung netsten befundenen Schauspieler(innen) zu “casten”, also seur zeigte bereits 2013 Halbschatten im Forum.
unter Bedingungen subjektiver Bewertung des Könnens, im wörtlichen Sinne “in die Rolle hineinzumodellieren”, als
des “Typs” und der Flexibilität des Darstellers/der Dar- seien sie Material, das erst in einer Gussform Gestalt an-
» Camera Threat von Bernd Lützeler ist im dies-
jährigen Forum Expanded zu sehen. Ausgehend
stellerin stattfindet, der/die daraufhin überprüft wird, ob nehmen kann. von einem improvisierten Gespräch auf der Cas-
er/sie den Ansprüchen einer Rolle genügen kann. In den ting-Couch untersucht er das ambivalente Verhältnis
Konstellationen von Probe und Casting stellt sich die Frage Aus: Constanze Ruhm, „Casting Agentur: Casting As Agency“, in: Ko- der Filmstadt Mumbai zum analogen und digitalen
danach, welche Form der Arbeit künstlerisches Produzie- lik: Zeitschrift für Literatur. Hg. von Ernst/Fleischanderl, Sonderheft Bewegtbild.
ren überhaupt sei.1 Im Casting steht weiters aber auch das Film 21, Wien: Verein für Neue Literatur, 2014, S.21–29, S. 23f.
Verhältnis von Kunst und Leben, von Darstellung und In-
szenierung buchstäblich “auf dem Spiel”. Da im Casting
das Oszillieren zwischen Realität und Fiktion anhand eines
einzigen Schauspielerkörpers und -daseins zur Erscheinung
gelangt, haftet ihm etwas Liminales an. Es erscheint (wenn
eine solche Formulierung denn möglich ist) als der “noch
existenziellere” Modus der (Selbst-)Darstellung und der
Eigenverwertung innerhalb der Abläufe, die innerhalb der
Konventionen der Probe stattfinden. Schließlich ist es das
eigene Selbst, das im Casting zur Gänze in die Waagschale
geworfen werden muss. Das Casting zeigt sich so als eine
radikale Form der “Probe vor der Probe”, die den Weg zur
Teilhabe an der bevorstehenden Probenarbeit – wenn über-
haupt – erst eröffnet. Noch geht es hier gar nicht um die
Einübung von Figur, Text, Position und Haltung: Es ist das
Leben selbst, das auf der Probe steht.
Das Subjekt findet sich auf dem Prüfstand einer (im bes-
T
he Stars Down to Earth: this is no ref-
erence to rising and falling stars. It could
refer to the spectral disappointments of
recent years. The Stars Down to Earth: an
allegory of stolen revolutions and failed
aspirations. But the formula that forms the
title of this year’s Forum Expanded was once used by The-
odor Adorno for a selection of essays on authoritarian irra-
tionalism, and a penetrating analysis of an astrology column
in particular. Revisiting it underlines the uncanny timeliness
of this analysis. But it also serves us to question just what
“down to earth” might (still) mean, and what can be an ap-
propriate language for these shifting grounds of rationality
and the dialectics of geo-politics and mediated subjectivity.
Because “Earth”, today, offers no stable ground, and little
by way of an anchoring rationality. As invested in the (geo-)
political as almost every previous edition, the 2017 edition Studies on the Ecology of Drama by Eija-Liisa Ahtila
of Forum Expanded is also an expression of uncertainty.
The topicality of The Stars Down to Earth and oth-
er closely related work on the psychology of authoritarian projection for the figments of fantasy and imagination - » Anselm Franke is a curator, author and head of
irrationalism is striking at a time when the “blatant insin- have descended to earth. Post-truth also means that what the Department of Visual Arts and Film at the Haus
cerity”, the “phoniness” and “clowning” of a fascist agita- constitutes “facts” has become ungrounded: when no truth der Kulturen der Welt. He is also the co-founder of
tor like Martin Luther Thomas in the 1930s have returned can be named and raised anymore outside of “social facts”: Forum Expanded and part of their curatorial team.
in the form of a new “post-truth” culture of “alternative the viral phantasms created by contagious memes on the Every year, Forum Expanded follows a theme which
facts”, and when the self-aggrandizement of a self-appoint- one hand feeding off outlived narratives, and the false pos- in this year is “The Stars Down to Earth”.
ed plebeian tribune are reminiscent of Germany’s “great itivist promise of de-subjectified data-patterns on the oth-
little man”, compulsively enacting the great leader and the er. Paranoia constitutes an entirely “rational” response to a
local barber, and the rebellious child and strict punitive dis- world modeled by the paranoid ideas of market ideologues.
ciplinarian at the same time. Today’s populist rhetoric still The present is not distinguishing itself as a time of ity and meaning-making, turning into a way of seeing and
uses the very same devices of paranoic projection identified formal innovation, not even in the experimental arts, and perhaps a way of life, of survival, of maintaining sanity, of
by Adorno in a few concise formulas, whose compensatory where this does occur, it is not necessarily linked to social keeping grounded on uncertain ground. Its mode of reflec-
irrationality pays tribute to the “logic” of the unconscious experimentation with the modes of subjectivation and col- tion begins not by fixing meaning, but by ungrounding it, by
through inversion and conversion: of truth into lie, weak- lectivity. A certain conservatism and mannerism prevails, rendering it uncanny, as it were.
ness and impotence into imagined strength and omnipo- not only in corporate culture. The far-reaching transforma- Forum Expanded also does not claim to emphasize
tence, conformity into rebellion, persecution into alleged tions that culture is undergoing are occurring under the sur- formal innovation this year, neither with regards to the
victimhood. This inversion serves to build up a phantasm face, through technology and financialization, in the deep nature of the moving image nor the cinema dispositif. The
of identity and essence as much as it acts as systemic diver- strata and deep time of meaning-making processes. They works it presents rather seek to offer alternatives to the ero-
sion, “a nuance away” from reflection and the analysis and concern our very nature as social, relational beings. But little sion of semantics. It emphasizes a consciousness of deep
critique of a spiraling capitalism. Even the long discarded is visible, in the old sense, of this transformation. The new time and the long dureé: history is the very space of reso-
analogies between fascism and the culture of mass media CGI-hyperrealism conjures up the memes of a stagnated, nance through which meaning becomes possible and expe-
are worth revisiting, if only to raise uncomfortable ques- undead capitalist “nature”. An increasingly human-made, rience defendable, even if this history is as impossible as has
tions as to the difference between decentralized, “demo- and yet abstracted environment confronts us everywhere in been the case in most of the revolutions and movements
cratic” media such as the internet and the monolithic mass the form of a pervasive communication matrix, presenting of recent years. The works gathered here act in defense of
media of an earlier period, such as radio and television, with us with mirror-images of past understandings (including language and experience even where they are speechless.
regards to their respective “hypnotizing” powers and path- our own “preferences”). And what we see might look fami- They speak of and out of ruins – literally, from the ruins of
ologies. The stakes in creating and defending a culture of liar, but it is no longer part of the same chain of meanings, Beirut and Palestine among other places, and the wrecked
democracy through differential semantics are even higher and they no longer serve as cognitive maps of the same ships of colonialism and the migration to the north - as con-
today than they were in the mid-twentieth century, as arch- terrain. ceptual acts that stand up against the destruction of sense.
aic mechanisms of mimetic desire and contagion have be- The form of critical, self-reflexive, transdisciplinary The 2017 edition of Forum Expanded is as diverse as previ-
come algorithmically entrenched in global technological art production working in the legacy of experimental cine- ous editions, but in the exhibition in particular, a theme nev-
“social” networks. Thus the stars – as powerful, allegedly ma, conceptual arts and writerly methods of ficto-criticism, ertheless prevails: the struggle for descriptive languages for
determining and ultimately alien forces and as screens of has the capacity to defend a sense of reality - a reality that the forces that destroy and bring human collectives into be-
is to be found in the oscillating tensions that characterize ing, the struggle to define the shifting lines of emancipatory
the relationship between terrain and map, between the stars and pathological social bonds. It speaks of the experience
» Eine deutsche Übersetzung dieses Artikels finden and the earth. It seeks to produce situated, non-essentialist of a collectivity that needs to be defended while it is being
Sie auf der Seite http://www.arsenal-berlin.de/de/ber- knowledge. Art, where it does not deliver itself to populist invented, that is simultaneously no longer and not yet articu-
linale-forum/magazin/the-stars-down-to-earth.html affect and lives up to the demands of the present, insists lated, to whom language seems to come either too early or
and exposes the ambiguity and complexity of all visibil- too late.
The “Bouanani-esque”
Turn in Moroccan Cinema
by Ali Essafi
» A film that is not necessary, a film that that formed both the central leitmotiv of his work and the and publishing market pressures and which was topped by
principal cause of his misfortunes. My curiosity was piqued Tahar Ben Jelloun and Graham Greene. Conversely, we
is not deeply rooted in our realities, does
rather than dampened by this ‘deliberate erasure’. shared a particular fondness for great writers who had only
not interest me. «
In the meantime, I’d managed to discover Mémoire written a single novel. As I waited to get my hands on a
Since my return to Morocco in 2004, I have sought to get to 14 and Sixe et douze, which were unknown to me, just as copy of John K. Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces, I gave him
know Ahmed Bouanani and his cinema from closer up. One they were to most of my generation. I felt a rush of emo- one of my favorites in the genre, Pedro Páramo. Juan Rulfo’s
major lesson has stayed with me from my studies in the West, tions, anger but also pride. And a rush of questions that I masterpiece of Mexican literature marked the starting point
namely that the creative act is intimately linked to both how have been carrying with me since. of Latin American magical realism, yet from some obscure
artistic production accumulates over generations as well as Why have I and those like me been denied access to reason, he’d remained unknown to Moroccan readers. I was
the way it’s transmitted. While tracing the lineage of my own these major works? Would I have followed the same path impatient to hear Bouanani’s reaction, as he was both a writ-
practice, The Mirage and Traces come first in my panth- had I known Bouanani’s oeuvre when I was 20 years old? er as well as an inveterate reader. On my next visit, he enthu-
eon of our national cinematic legacy. I had finally found the In 2007, a relatively unknown festival in Rabat finally dared siastically read out the first two pages for me in his beautiful
thread. And once I was finally able to discover La Marche honor him with a tribute. That was when I was finally able storyteller’s voice 1 . He was keen on demonstrating that a
d’un pòete, and Les quatre sources, I naturally identified to meet him in person. His body was like that of a ghost, but few paragraphs were sufficient to recognize the mark of a
with the heroes of both films and their quest for the key to his spirit was lively, and his hand gestures elegant. His gaze great novel. After that, Juan Rulfo’s book was always at the
the “seventh gate”. Contrary to my expectations, my own remained youthful and piercing, his memory miraculously very top of the stack of books that lay next to him. On ev-
quest to find Bouanani turned out to be almost impossible intact. He had no trouble listing, not without irony, the num- ery one of my visits, Bouanani reminded me that he always
to accomplish. By the time I had returned to Morocco, he’d ber of times that people claimed he was deceased! The day kept this novella close by. Praise be to Juan Rulfo’s spirit, that
actually retreated to Aït Oumghar, a small town in the High after our encounter, I was witness to yet another example illustrious stranger who sealed my complicity with Bouanani!
Atlas. Those from the film profession I made enquiries with of this repeated morbid occurrence. I was with the director Praise be to Juan Rulfo’s spirit, that illustrious stranger who
politely discouraged my attempts to meet him. I was given of the Three Continents Festival in Nantes, when we came sealed my friendship with Bouanani! Together with the sup-
different arguments, that “he’s in a terrible state of health, in across Bouanani in the hotel elevator. As I proceeded with port and participation of Naïma Saoudi Bouanani 2 and their
total agony”, that “he has a dour temperament and rejects introductions, my companion looked at Bouanani anxiously, daughter Touda, this was what made it possible for me to
company, that he’s “drunk from morning until night”, or and after fumbling for words, he asked: “So you’re alive?” film our series of conversations, in view of a prospective
that he was “a recluse in a lost hamlet no one knew how to Bouanani’s answer was a mischievous smile. A year prior, film. It was then that the historical overview of his cinematic
get to”... The traces of his filmography I found on the web the Three Continents Festival had presented a panorama journey that I recount here was able to be gleaned.
were imprecise, contradictory and incomplete. Not a single of the best Moroccan films and Bouanani had been invited The story starts at the beginning of the 1960s. The
picture of him was available, with the rare press reviews of to attend the screening of The Mirage. Needless to say, he country had gained independence a short while earlier, but
his work always being illustrated instead by his namesake, a didn’t come. had quickly been swept up in power struggles and the Cold
well-known national television host. The first photograph I had no trouble finding my way into the solitary War’s stark bi-polarization. When Bouanani returned to
to surface later on was the one I subsequently gave to the realm of the ‘Bouanani-esque Turn in Moroccan Cinema’.
press... for his obituary! Only one bookshop in Casablanca Our shared cinematic affinities played an obvious part in our
still owned copies of his book L’Hôpital. In fact, Ahmed becoming close, but the privileged intimacy I was granted » Eine deutsche Übersetzung dieses Artikels finden
Bouanani and his oeuvre had almost entirely disappeared until his passing was more due to our literary rapport. There Sie auf der Seite http://www.arsenal-berlin.de/de/ber-
from circulation. Slowly but surely, he was being erased was a well-appointed list of celebrated writers whose novels linale-forum/magazin/ali-essafi-ueber-ahmed-bouanani.
from collective memory, the very-same cursed “memory” we had both been unable to finish, a list which defied trends html
Morocco in 1963 emboldened with aspirations and ideas for aspirations and mindset often clashed with the ignorance of archival footage and told the history of Morocco from the
projects after completing three years of studies in France, the censors. After the national television channel was launched moment of colonization up to the present era. It was also
country was in the grip of tension. The only option for the in 1966, the CCM was expected to provide it with content. inspired by a poem of the same name later published in Les
recent graduate of the Institut des Hautes Etudes Cinémato- Bouanani subverted what was expected of these commis- Persiennes (The Screens).
graphiques (IDHEC) was to join the Centre Cinémato- sions to make the films he no longer wanted to put off During that time, he also devised various additional
graphique Marocain (CCM), the only institution producing making. Tarfaya, ou La marche d’un pòete is the most em- strategies to get around the ban on film directing. In 1968,
films at that time. What kind of films? The CCM was a small blematic of these subversions. He was supposed to make an he managed to shoot a short film essay titled Six et douze
office belonging to the Palace, under the tight control of the institutional documentary about the massive public works with the illicit help of two technicians at the CCM who were
Ministry of Interior. It did not produce cinema per se, but being undertaken in the town of Tarfaya, which had recently fellow graduates of the IDHEC with whom he had collab-
rather newsreels shot on film that were screened in theaters been liberated from Spanish colonial rule. Bouanani brought orated on Tarfaya. Their names appear as the directors in
prior to the main feature. The newsreels chiefly documented his own poetic approach to bear on the subject, almost as if the credits, while he is listed as editor. Bouanani broke with
the activities of the Palace and the government respectively. creating a manifesto. The history of Tarfaya was told by way convention, however, by making sure that the title crediting
In other words, there were no possibilities for an artist of of a young poet’s quest to find an ancient spiritual master, him as editor appeared first, thus snubbing the censors. In
Bouanani’s ilk to pursue his aspirations. He was hired as the which becomes an initiation the appendix to his History of Cinema in Morocco 3 , Bouanani
center’s chief film editor. From the very beginning, he was Immediately after his return from France and prior to noted: “In a country where the majority of the population is
under close surveillance because the director of the IDHEC joining the CCM, Bouanani was asked by Mme. Aherdane illiterate, the credits are the least read text in a film.”
had drafted a report in which he mentioned Bouanani’s to collaborate on Marrakesh’s Festival of Popular Arts. This Six et douze is an 18-minute black and white essay
association with French anarcho-Trotskyite colleagues. In opportune assignment allowed him to travel throughout film. It was intended as a study of how light and movement
Morocco, he was immediately labeled as a communist. The the countryside, drawing, taking photos and collecting the change between the hours 6 and 12 in Casablanca. The film
fact that his graduation project focused on Andrzej Wajda’s oral history of popular arts before they were subsequent- contains neither a commentary, nor a voice-over, and thus
film Generation, a Polish director who hailed from a com- ly re-packaged as folklore. He became passionate about the carries distinct echoes of Dziga Vertov’s Man with a Movie
munist country, only seemed to confirm this label. In truth, sung poetry of Sidi Hammou, a legendary Soussi bard. His Camera 4 . It is what is widely known as a ‘montage film’. The
Bouanani was never affiliated to any political movement or research on the popular 16th century poet informed the film’s soundscape is masterful, with Bouanani being one of
party, but rather displayed contempt for politics and politi- parable at the heart of his film on Tarfaya. It is worth not- the rare Moroccan filmmakers to pay such attention to this
cians from the entire spectrum to the very end of his life. ing here that most of Bouanani’s cinematic projects invari- particular side of the craft. He confided in me that he invest-
Bouanani was only interested in memory, his own, ably had their genesis in poems, sometimes accompanied ed all his energy and creativity in devising the sound design
that of his family and his country, and this interest was nei- by drawings, before they were subsequently developed into after he realized that the censors would pay no attention to it
ther arbitrary nor an intellectual whim. The drama of coloni- novels or scripts. This first “pirate” project did not disturb and would be far more focused on the image. In his History
zation left an irrevocable mark on his biography. His father, anyone. Bouanani was not satisfied. One day, he confessed of Cinema in Morocco, Bouanani goes into greater detail about
a police officer, was assassinated in shady circumstances as to me that if the “sequences formally connected to the in- the origin and limitations of this nominally collective work.
scores were settled in the final hours of the colonial era. The structions contained within the commission were edited out, His critique was fair and acknowledged the circumstances
tragedy took place only a stone’s throw from their family [his] film, La marche d’un pòete would be unearthed. It in which it was made. Six et douze is ultimately a unique
home, almost under Bouanani’s eyes, who was merely 16 was not satisfying, but at least it was there, at a time when document that captures life in Casablanca in 1968.
years old at the time. He did not witness the killing, but ar- there were no other means of production.” During the vibrancy of the year 1970, Bouanani de-
rived on the scene shortly thereafter. From that moment on, The real problems began in 1967, when a new direc- cided to emancipate himself from the CCM’s tutelage and
“death had a long memory”, and he was never able to forget tor was appointed to head the CCM. From the outset, he re- set up Sygma3, an independent filmmaking collective, with
the sight of the “stains of blood on the sidewalk”, which garded Bouanani as a maverick who needed to be contained. two other young colleagues. With a few thousand dirhams, a
shattered his “bicycle dreams”. Even at the end of his life, Bouanani was consequently reassigned to the archive de- single car and a great deal of ambition, the collective subse-
Bouanani would bring up this dramatic incident at every one partment and was only able to work as an editor. Bouanani’s quently produced Wechma (Traces), which has been con-
of our encounters. sidelining, which CCM’s hierarchy regarded as a punishment, sidered one of the masterpieces of Moroccan cinema since
Bouanani’s interest in memory is also very likely to was in fact his fortune. Bouanani had had a keen interest in its release. Once the film was completed, one of the mem-
have been linked to the disposition of his whole generation. archives for a long time already. He collected and classified bers of the collective seized the opportunity to claim its sole
He was keenly aware that he belonged to an intermediate all the archival material left behind by the French, whether “paternity”, thus sidelining all the others. The Sygma3 exper-
generation which had both inherited an ancestral Morocco colonial, public, or private. To circumvent his filmmaking iment therefore foundered. In Weshma’s credits, Bouanani
on the brink of extinction and was at the same time deeply ban, he began to work secretly on his next feature-length was once again listed as editor, but his directorial signature
implicated in the transition to modernity. At the CCM, his film Mémoire 14, which was entirely stitched together from is clear, especially with the passage of time. The film’s level
Bouanani was once again prevented from directing the CCM agreed to support the film on the condition that
for a few years. In 1977, with yet another new director hav- the lead female role be given to a national singing star who
ing been appointed to the CCM, his skills and rights were was currently in his favor. It was that or nothing. In despair,
finally granted proper recognition, beginning with an adjust- Bouanani decided to withdraw from the world of film.
ment in his salary that had remained ‘frozen’ at the level he He never gave up hope, and his collaborations with a new
was earning when he first joined the CCM in 1963. Em- generation of filmmakers in the 1990s were the embodiment
boldened by this positive change, Bouanani launched into a of that hope, most notably, his work with Daoud Aoulad
new project based on a poetic fable. At that time, the CCM Syad, for whom he wrote and sometimes also edited films.
did not award production funds to fiction films. With the How many scripts, essays and projects lie stacked in his box-
support of a small volunteer crew, Naïma’s talent for making es? And what of those that went up in smoke in the ump-
magic, and materials left behind by foreign film productions teenth tragedy to hit his life, namely the fire that ravaged
given to them by their friend and set designer Mohamed Os- his apartment? His daughter Touda, who has undertaken the
four 5 , Bouanani directed Les quatre sources in 1977. It is task of archiving his legacy, keeps discovering new materials.
a 35-minute short film in which he experimented with color The film that I am preparing in collaboration with her will
for the first and last time. When I showed it to him in 2010, acknowledge Bouanani’s production in its entirety. In the
Bouanani had not seen it since its completion! His face was meantime, my quest will have at least revived this captiva- Retour à Agadir by Mohamed Afifi
overcome with emotion when watching the first sequence: ting cinematographic legacy that was lying dormant in cel-
“I had forgotten that the film was a failure!” Like any self-re- lars. The films that neither Bouanani himself nor his family
specting artist, Bouanani was rarely satisfied with his own had any access to are finally being screened at film festivals
work. In this case, he had been deprived of the financial and national institutes for cinema. Cinephiles across the
means to cover the fees for the actors he wanted to cast. In world now have the chance to enjoy them again.
spite of its imperfections, this poetic fable attests to an orig-
inal style that had by now matured. The modernity of his » Blissful are those whose memory rests in peace «
approach goes way beyond the majority of short films pro- says the first verse of Mémoire 14.
duced in Morocco today. The story is again centered on an
initiation ritual, the poetic universe of which is close to Pier Ali Essafi, “La medersa Bouanania li cinéma al maghribia”,
Paolo Pasolini’s A Thousand and One Nights, as well as Ser- in: nejma, Numéro 9, Tanger: Librairie des Colonnes Édi-
gei Parajanov’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, both of which tions (2014).
Bouanani had not seen at that point.
In 1979, he was finally granted the opportunity to
direct his only feature film. Even though the budget was ri-
diculously low, Bouanani did not want to miss the chance.
It was the start of the completion of a film he had started
writing 10 years previously and continued to work on the
whole time. After making a few tests in color which Boua-
nani deemed disappointing, Al-Sarab was shot in black and
white, against the prevailing trend. In spite of the film’s
unanimous critical acclaim and festival awards, distributors
turned their back on the film because it was in black and
white, an “old-fashioned” aesthetic they deemed not easily
marketable. Bouanani’s faith was unwavering however. He
requested support for a science-fiction project that was lying 1 A trace of that storyteller’s voice thankfully remains in his film Les quatre sources.
dormant in his drawers entitled La Barrière. The director of 2 Ahmed Bouanani’s spouse and a pioneering art director and costume designer in Moroccan cinema.
3 A long-term research project completed at the end of the 1980s which no Moroccan publisher wanted to sign onto.
4 Bouanani refers to the influence of Mohamed Afifi, who he considered to have founded a whole school of Moroccan documentary
cinema before his premature death. Six et douze, Mémoire 14, as well as Majid Rechiche’s Al-Boraq and Forêts are its legitimate descendants.
Mohamed Afifi (who should not be confused with the famous comedian of the same name) directed Retour à Agadir in the late 1950s, and
later De chair et d’acier, before succumbing to despair and changing professions. Bouanani dedicated an entire chapter to his work in History
of Cinema in Morocco.
5 Mohamed Osfour is a pioneer of Moroccan cinema whose first amateur film editing sessions and screenings Bouanani attended when
he was a teenager. Bouanani directed a compelling docu-fiction entitled Petite histoire en marge du cinématographe in homage to him, as well as
dedicating an entire chapter to his work in his History of Cinema in Morocco.
Mythos
Geschichte
lution nach. Anhand von Filmen aus der Zeit des palästi-
nensischen Widerstandskinos, die zwischen 1968 und 1982
produziert wurden, erzählt Yaqubi die Geschichte eines
Volks im Widerstand – zwischen Fiktion und Propaganda,
Traum und Wirklichkeit.
# # # # # # # # # # #
Shu‘our akbar min el hob (A Feeling Greater Than Love) von Mary Jirmanus Saba
Archiv
16
Redaktion:
diesem Umfeld sind im Forum zu sehen. Vergesst Aristoteles! Der dramatischste Moment Anna Hoffmann, Hanna Keller, Marie Kloos, James Lattimer,
The Sensory Ethnography Lab was founded a des Films ist das Casting, nicht die Katharsis. Christoph Terhechte (V.i.S.d.P.)
Mitarbeit:
decade ago and hasn’t just re-defined ethnographic film, Im Casting wird nicht nur das Schauspiel auf die Anna Schwietering
but also poses a more fundamental question: is this docu- Probe gestellt, sondern die pure Existenz. Kristin Flade
mentary? Two new works from this context are showing at Forget what Aristoteles said! The most dramatic Übersetzungen:
this year’s Forum. moment of a film is the casting, not the catharsis. At cast- Wolfgang Martin Hamdorf, James Lattimer, Rasha Salti,
Sabine Seifert, Matthew Way, Caroline Weiland
-- ings, it’s not just acting that’s put to the test, but rather Layout und Gestaltung:
existence itself.
4
Britta Paulich & Ulrike Wewerke – paulichwewerke, Berlin
Der fünfte „Think Film“-Kongress folgt dem Leit- -- Druck:
gedanken von „Archival Constellations“. Über Ar- Möller Druck und Verlag GmbH, Ahrensfelde
chive als Zeitmaschinen und die Ungleichzeitigkeit
des Wissens.
The theme of the fifth “Think Film” conference is
“Archival Constellations”. On archives as time machines
and the non-simultaneity of knowledge.
17 Das Programm von Forum Expanded richtet
den Blick nicht zu den Sternen, sondern auf
den Boden der Tatsachen. Anselm Franke über
Adorno, über Täter, die sich als Opfer gebärden, und über
eine Kunst, die eine Sprache für die Wirklichkeit findet.
-- The Forum Expanded programme doesn’t look to
the stars but rather brings its gaze back down to Earth.
9 Vor einigen Jahren war das Neue Argentinische Anselm Franke on Adorno, perpetrators who behave like Das Internationale Forum des Jungen Films ist eine Veranstaltung des
Arsenal – Institut für Film und Videokunst e.V. im Rahmen der Inter-
Kino in aller Munde. Die drei argentinischen Filme, victims and art that finds a language to articulate reality. nationalen Filmfestspiele Berlin. Ein Geschäftsbereich der Kultur-
die das Forum in diesem Jahr zeigt, sind auf diesem -- veranstaltungen des Bundes in Berlin (KBB) GmbH.
Nährboden gewachsen. Sie sind so argentinisch wie glo-
bal. Machen nationale Kategorien überhaupt noch Sinn?
Gedanken aus Buenos Aires.
The New Argentine Cinema used to be on every-
one’s lips. This movement was a suitable breeding ground
for the three films from Argentina showing at this year’s
18 Ahmed Bouanani musste seine Vision eines
künstlerischen marokkanischen Kinos gegen
zahllose Widerstände durchsetzen. Er schuf nur
einen Spielfilm und wenige Kurzfilme, doch sein Einfluss
wirkt bis heute. Ali Essafi beschreibt die Odyssee des
Internationales Forum des Jungen Films
Potsdamer Str. 2, 10785 Berlin
Tel.: +49 (0) 30 269 55 200 / Fax: +49 (0) 30 269 55 222
Email: forum@arsenal-berlin.de
Forum, even though they’re as much global as they are Filmpioniers und seine Bedeutung für die Gegenwart. www.arsenal-berlin.de/forum
Argentinian. Do national categories even make sense any- Ahmed Bouanani faced numerous problems in get- facebook.com/berlinaleforum
more? Some thoughts from Buenos Aires. ting across his vision of an artistic Moroccan cinema. He @BerlinaleForum
-- made only one feature and a handful of shorts, yet his in-
fluence is still considerable. Ali Essafi describes the odys- Für die großzügige Unterstützung danken wir Möller Druck und
Verlag GmbH (Ahrensfelde b. Berlin).
sey of this cinematic pioneer and his significance for today.
--