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07 MOVIES CONTACT US AT: 8351-9186, [email protected] Fri/Sat/Sun April 17~19, 2020 《隐秘的生活》 Starring: August Diehl, Valerie Pachner, Maria Simon, Karin Neuhauser, Bruno Ganz Director: Terrence Malick August Diehl (R) and Valerie Pachner in “A Hidden Life.” File photos A Hidden Life T errence Malick’s heart- felt and reverently high- minded new movie is inspired by a life that is little-known — hidden, perhaps. Franz Jagerstatter was an Austrian conscientious objector during the Second World War who made a per- sonal stand for his anti-Nazi beliefs by refusing to take the Hitler oath as a Wehrmacht conscript and in 1943 was duly executed. August Diehl (who played the lead in Raoul Peck’s “The Young Karl Marx”) is Jagerstatter; Valerie Pachner is his wife Franziska, and there are cameos from Matthias Schoenarts as Jagerstatter’s defense lawyer and the late Bruno Ganz as the military tribunal president who sorrowingly questions Jagerstatter about what he sees as the stubborn- ness and futility of his beliefs before reluctantly passing the terrible sen- tence of death. The title is taken from George Eliot’s “Middlemarch”: “The grow- ing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.” Modest though he was, Jagerstatter’s own tomb is not in fact entirely unvisited, as Pope Benedict XVI beatified him in 2007, perhaps partly in contrition for the Church’s failure to oppose the Nazis. The style that Malick has found for this subject is very much the same as ever: an overpowering sense of being ecstatically, epiph- anically in the present moment, an ambient feeling of exaltation cre- ated by a montage of camera shots swooning, swooping and looming around the characters who appear often to be lost in thought, to an orchestral or organ accompani- ment, and a murmured voiceover narration of the characters’ intimate but distinctly abstract feelings and memories. One tic is not here, in fact: the camera shot directly into a distant sunset. Perhaps it felt too American. When Malick uses black-and-white newsreel clips, it is momentarily disconcerting to be reminded of straightforwardly con- ventional cinematic grammar. Deploying this rhetoric in the service of such an important subject would appear to make sense. Often it does make perfect sense, although Malick has made a movie about the Second World War before: “The Thin Red Line” in 1998, his adaptation of James Jones’s novel about the battle of Guadalcanal in the Pacific. Malick’s visionary approach points up at first the pure happiness of the couple’s life together in the village of Rade- gund, and then it distils the agony of Jagerstatter’s qualms of conscience and his dark night of the soul as he decides to defy the Nazis, and then his loneliness and anguish in prison — and Franziska’s own loneliness left alone with the children, an outcast. Its religious quality is appropriate too, as Jagerstatter was a Catholic. Y et the strange thing is that the nature of the leading charac- ter’s intensity seems not all that different from the intensity of Ryan Gosling’s thoughtful singer- songwriter in Malick’s “Song to Song” (2017), or Christian Bale’s tortured screenwriter in “Knight of Cups” (2015) or Ben Affleck’s engi- neer in “To the Wonder” (2014) whose woes are considerably less pressing — though their spiritual lives are undoubtedly important, and Malick is an film-maker very much concerned with the life of the spirit. It is as if Malick has taken Jagerstatter and enclosed him in exactly that same hermetically sealed environment of heightened awareness of the present moment, and unawareness of the larger context. By creating one of his signature rhapsodies around this anti- Nazi figure, Malick has in a way marooned and islanded Jagerstat- ter, detaching him from much of the larger historical context — though one thing the film does reveal is that Jagerstatter was not as prominent a figure as, say, Sophie Scholl, because he did not actively campaign for and publicize his views: What he did was report for a second term of duty in the Wehrmacht (having already served uncontroversially up to the fall of France), refuse to give the oath, and then submit to being bundled away. Yet Malick does succeed, to some degree, on his own terms; he attempts to give some stylized sense of this man’s inner life: his emotional and spiritual architec- ture. It is admirably serious but static. (SD-Agencies) At a Glance: Hit Movies Honeyland Set in a faraway corner of the Balkan Pen- insula, this documentary is an unforget- table character study and a close look at an endangered tradition. That tradition is wild beekeeping, or bee hunting, and the film’s central character is said to be the only woman in Europe still carrying on the practice in the old-school way — which is to say, in harmony with the insects. Shot over a three-year period, the film began as a commissioned video for an environmen- tal project and found its heart in Hatidze Muratova, who trusted in the directors and let them into her life. Directors: Tamara Kotevska, Ljubomir Stefanov The Platform An accidentally perfect parable for current times, “The Platform” has an ingeniously simple premise: Goreng wakes up in a concrete room. In the center of the floor and ceiling are large, rectangular holes, through which he can see other identical rooms stretching above and below across innumerable stories. Each room contains two people. Every day, a platform covered in food is presented to Floor 1. Once Floor 1’s inhabitants have eaten their fill, the platform is lowered to Floor 2. They eat their fill, and the platform is lowered again, and so on. Each floor can only eat what the floor above leaves. Greed and selfishness are rife, but Goreng hopes that he can change that, one way or another. Director: Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia A Sun This film follows a troubled family of four. A-Ho, the younger son, has always been a problematic child, and his father, A-Wen has invested all his hopes and expectations in his introverted eldest son A-Hao. While A-Hao is trying to get into medical school, A-Ho faces juvenile detention for a crime commit- ted with his best friend. Not long after A-Ho is sent to prison, his girlfriend shows up on his mother Qin’s doorstep. The teenage girl is pregnant and determined to have A-Ho’s child, even though he is locked up and has no idea she is expecting. Director: Chung Mong-Hong A scene from “A Hidden Life.” File photos

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Page 1: 07 MOVIES - szdaily.sznews.comszdaily.sznews.com/attachment/pdf/202004/17/63856b... · Karl Marx”) is Jagerstatter; Valerie Pachner is his wife Franziska, and ... and his dark night

07 MOVIES CONTACT US AT: 8351-9186, [email protected]/Sat/Sun April 17~19, 2020

《隐秘的生活》

Starring: August Diehl, Valerie Pachner, Maria Simon, Karin Neuhauser, Bruno GanzDirector: Terrence Malick

August Diehl (R) and Valerie Pachner in “A Hidden Life.” File photos

A Hidden Life

Terrence Malick’s heart-felt and reverently high-minded new movie is inspired by a life that is

little-known — hidden, perhaps. Franz Jagerstatter was an Austrian conscientious objector during the Second World War who made a per-sonal stand for his anti-Nazi beliefs by refusing to take the Hitler oath as a Wehrmacht conscript and in 1943 was duly executed.

August Diehl (who played the lead in Raoul Peck’s “The Young Karl Marx”) is Jagerstatter; Valerie Pachner is his wife Franziska, and there are cameos from Matthias Schoenarts as Jagerstatter’s defense lawyer and the late Bruno Ganz as the military tribunal president who sorrowingly questions Jagerstatter about what he sees as the stubborn-ness and futility of his beliefs before reluctantly passing the terrible sen-tence of death.

The title is taken from George Eliot’s “Middlemarch”: “The grow-ing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.” Modest though he was, Jagerstatter’s own tomb is not in fact entirely unvisited, as Pope Benedict XVI beatified him in 2007, perhaps partly in contrition for the Church’s failure to oppose the Nazis.

The style that Malick has found for this subject is very much the same as ever: an overpowering sense of being ecstatically, epiph-anically in the present moment, an ambient feeling of exaltation cre-ated by a montage of camera shots swooning, swooping and looming around the characters who appear

often to be lost in thought, to an orchestral or organ accompani-ment, and a murmured voiceover narration of the characters’ intimate but distinctly abstract feelings and memories. One tic is not here, in fact: the camera shot directly into a distant sunset. Perhaps it felt too American. When Malick uses black-and-white newsreel clips, it is momentarily disconcerting to be reminded of straightforwardly con-ventional cinematic grammar.

Deploying this rhetoric in the service of such an important subject would appear to make sense. Often it does make perfect sense, although Malick has made a movie about the Second World War before: “The Thin Red Line” in 1998, his adaptation of James Jones’s novel about the battle of Guadalcanal in the Pacific. Malick’s visionary approach points up at first the pure happiness of the couple’s life together in the village of Rade-gund, and then it distils the agony of Jagerstatter’s qualms of conscience and his dark night of the soul as he decides to defy the Nazis, and then his loneliness and anguish in prison — and Franziska’s own loneliness left alone with the children, an outcast. Its religious quality is appropriate too, as Jagerstatter was a Catholic.

Yet the strange thing is that the nature of the leading charac-ter’s intensity seems not all

that different from the intensity of Ryan Gosling’s thoughtful singer-songwriter in Malick’s “Song to Song” (2017), or Christian Bale’s tortured screenwriter in “Knight of Cups” (2015) or Ben Affleck’s engi-neer in “To the Wonder” (2014) whose woes are considerably less pressing — though their spiritual

lives are undoubtedly important, and Malick is an film-maker very much concerned with the life of the spirit. It is as if Malick has taken Jagerstatter and enclosed him in exactly that same hermetically sealed environment of heightened awareness of the present moment, and unawareness of the larger context.

By creating one of his signature rhapsodies around this anti-Nazi figure, Malick has in a way marooned and islanded Jagerstat-ter, detaching him from much of the larger historical context — though one thing the film does reveal is that Jagerstatter was not as prominent a figure as, say, Sophie Scholl, because he did not actively campaign for and publicize his views: What he did was report for a second term of duty in the Wehrmacht (having already served uncontroversially up to the fall of France), refuse to give the oath, and then submit to being bundled away.

Yet Malick does succeed, to some degree, on his own terms; he attempts to give some stylized sense of this man’s inner life: his emotional and spiritual architec-ture. It is admirably serious but static. (SD-Agencies)

At a Glance: Hit Movies

Honeyland

Set in a faraway corner of the Balkan Pen-insula, this documentary is an unforget-table character study and a close look at an endangered tradition. That tradition is wild beekeeping, or bee hunting, and the film’s central character is said to be the only woman in Europe still carrying on the practice in the old-school way — which is to say, in harmony with the insects. Shot over a three-year period, the film began as a commissioned video for an environmen-tal project and found its heart in Hatidze Muratova, who trusted in the directors and let them into her life.

Directors: Tamara Kotevska, Ljubomir Stefanov

The Platform

An accidentally perfect parable for current times, “The Platform” has an ingeniously simple premise: Goreng wakes up in a concrete room. In the center of the floor and ceiling are large, rectangular holes, through which he can see other identical rooms stretching above and below across innumerable stories. Each room contains two people. Every day, a platform covered in food is presented to Floor 1. Once Floor 1’s inhabitants have eaten their fill, the platform is lowered to Floor 2. They eat their fill, and the platform is lowered again, and so on. Each floor can only eat what the floor above leaves. Greed and selfishness are rife, but Goreng hopes that he can change that, one way or another.

Director: Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia

A Sun

This film follows a troubled family of four. A-Ho, the younger son, has always been a problematic child, and his father, A-Wen has invested all his hopes and expectations in his introverted eldest son A-Hao. While A-Hao is trying to get into medical school, A-Ho faces juvenile detention for a crime commit-ted with his best friend. Not long after A-Ho is sent to prison, his girlfriend shows up on his mother Qin’s doorstep. The teenage girl is pregnant and determined to have A-Ho’s child, even though he is locked up and has no idea she is expecting.

Director: Chung Mong-HongA scene from “A Hidden Life.” File photos