About Me

So far, I write about what ever holds my attention the most stubbornly. For the most part we're just doing reviews, but occasionally other things will pop-up as well.

Featured Post

Black Reconstruction by W. E. B. Du Bois

My first post here is of course a Goodreads review, but one of my favorite and the only one that won't show-up on the book's entry p...

Showing posts with label Elia Suleiman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elia Suleiman. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

It Must Be Heaven (2019) directed by Elia Suleiman

 After the ending of The Time That Remains (2009), I thought that Elia Suleiman had said everything he wanted to say in regards to the fate of Palestinians in The Holy Land. I mean despite the brief optimism of the Arab Spring, things got much worse and Israel's occupation of the West Bank and its blockade of Gaza have been total. With the majority of Arab states no longer ignoring it diplomatically or opposing it, Israel can now treat the Palestinians any way they want with no threat of recourse. It seems Suleiman has recognized this too, so after 30 minutes of the audience catching up with him after 10 years (his mom has died―the last recognizable person of his first 3 films), and with his Palestinian neighbors looking like characters from The Iceman Cometh, he decides to leave. Suleiman's first feature film sees him come into Palestine from exile in New York City and Europe and now he is taking the reverse journey.

We first see him, after an interesting plane ride, in Paris just in time for Bastille Day celebrations. He finds Paris intriguing and very welcome change of pace (we find out interestingly that Suleiman, like Akira Kurosawa, is an ass man). We then see how the charm of Paris quickly fades to bewilderment at the culture change takes him by surprise (this is an actual thing called...Paris Syndrome). It should be noted that Suleiman is still playing his actual-self, so people recognize him as a film-maker throughout the film and he is often doing things concerning his film projects in this film (in this way, this film bares a big resemblance to Chantel Akerman's The Meeting's of Anna (1978)). We also can't miss the commentary of a man inspired by Jacques Tati making a film in Paris. But of course we have to move on to New York City.

Well, upon reaching Trump-era America...it is a trip. Besides being treated as invisible or passive aggressively-like in Paris his first interaction after not being in the USA since the 1990s is a taxi driver who is amazed at actually meeting a Palestinian (his second as we learn). He goes to a grocery store and is shocked that everyone in the store has a gun (this is not something you'd see in New York City, but if he was down South it would certainly be accurate) and it is a hilariously over-the-top scene. Once we get to Central Park the tone for this section of the film is set. The diversity of the city is unlike anything seen in Nazareth or Paris; the mania is also very uniquely NYC. After seeing all the folks with their weapons in the earlier scene we see a Palestinian woman engaged in a protest and is immediately swarmed by NYPD: the scene is very reminiscent of Chronicle of a Disappearance (1996). More call backs from 'Chronicles' come when we see his various speaking engagements in an art school and a Palestinian-American conference. We get a brief meeting of Suleiman with Gael García Bernal and a meeting with a fortune teller over the destiny of Palestine. 

After he finishes his stay in NYC, he goes back home a little happier and a little wiser, he realizes that at this point-in-time, there is no point leaving Palestine, because the world has become Palestine. It is a bittersweet realization, but a hopeful one for Suleiman.

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Chronicle of a Disappearance (1996) directed by Elia Suleiman

 I never had been a big fan of the silent, physical comic movies growing-up. Though I knew of Chaplain, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, Jacques Tati but I didn't really watch them until I started watching and being interested in films as art. I first got wind of Elia Suleiman during the promotion of The Time That Remains (2009). I became interested in his other films and I managed to see first Divine Intervention (2002) and then TTtR. It took me awhile at the time, but I eventually got to see his first feature film and was amazed by it.

In each of the three films in Suleiman's "Palestinian" trilogy, we follow the silent Suleiman as he observes and interacts with life in apartheid and statelessness. The first and third movies are autobiographical treatments of Suleiman and his parents while the second is a then-contemporary allegory of life in the Holy Land during the Second Intifada. Chronicle of a Disappearance sees Suleiman as he comes back to the region after a 12 year exile in New York City. He examines life for Palestinians in Nazareth and Jerusalem. It is him trying to adjust to life and others are not allowed to adjust even to the apartheid system. The film style of Jacques Tati is very present and the satirical spirit of Tati is used as a framework to examine life for Palestinians in the years between the First and Second Intifadas when the idea of peace was at it's closes for Israelis and Palestinians before the door of peace slammed shut. We principally observes what Suleiman observes in the Palestinian peoples of Nazareth and Jerusalem and in himself.

The introduction of the Jerusalem section and the film's end are what really endears the film to me. When we go to the "Jerusalem Political Diary" we are treated to a lengthy phantom ride through East Jerusalem that ends in the most random way imaginable. At the movie's end we have a powerfully moving tribute to his parents and a rebuke of what the Israeli state as tried to do to them in one of the most controversial scenes in Middle Eastern Cinema (ironically controversial with other Arabs) that ends with the simple dedication: "To my mother and father, the last homeland.