Poverty and recession infuse Venice movies

Director Paul Schrader says that the film industry is undergoing a systemic change.


Reuters September 01, 2013
Poverty and consequences of the 2008 economic crash were emerging themes at this year’s film festival. PHOTO: FILE

VENICE:


Nicolas Cage re-inhabits a low-life version of his Leaving Las Vegas alcoholic in the Southern gothic Joe, screened on Friday at the Venice Film Festival, while a German film explores the dark issue of wife beating in the latest competition offerings.


Poverty, and the effects of the 2008 economic crash on people and society, as well as the film industry, were emerging themes at this year’s festival, which opened on Wednesday and will conclude on September 7 with the awarding of the Golden Lion trophy for best film.

On Wednesday, Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron said his big-budget space disaster drama Gravity, the festival opener, had almost been derailed by the crash.

Director Paul Schrader, who made Taxi Driver, Raging Bull and other big hits of the ‘70s and ‘80s, said on Friday that economics had pretty much transformed the industry.

“The film business is undergoing a systematic change — not systematic [in fact], a systemic change. Everything we know in this from the past doesn’t apply,” Schrader, who made the latest Lindsay Lohan movie Canyons on a low budget, told a news conference.


Poverty and consequences of the 2008 economic crash were emerging themes at this year’s film festival. PHOTO: FILE

In Joe, directed by David Gordon Green and based on a novel of the same name by Larry Brown, Cage plays a hot-headed, bourbon-swigging southerner who befriends a young boy who comes from a violent background.

Poverty oozes out of almost every scene, from the battered GMC truck Joe drives and pick-up black workers he employs to poison a forest for clearance, to his neighbours in tumbledown shacks who eat wild animals they find by the side of the road.

“I was very careful in the selection of the movie. I hadn’t worked for one year and then I found this script,” Cage said at a news conference with his co-actors and the director.

“For me, it was a chance to return to some very in-depth character analysis, character building and to work with David,” said Cage, who won the Oscar for best actor for his portrayal of an alcoholic Hollywood screenwriter drinking himself to death in the 1995 film Leaving Las Vegas.

For that film, Cage said he learned how to portray a drunk by videotaping himself after a few drinks. This time, he said that he and co-actor Tye Sheridan, the teenage boy for whom Joe becomes a surrogate father, simulated the feeling by spinning around to make themselves dizzy.

Die Frau des Polizisten (The Police Officer’s Wife) shows a young family in provincial Germany whose seemingly carefree life descends into violence.

Director Philip Groening, who made the 2005 art-house hit Into Great Silence about Carthusian monks in the Swiss alps, said that while the film was mostly about the emotional and psychological triggers for abuse, economics also played a role.

“The film does not deal with domestic violence only, the film is also dealing with the love between the mother and the daughter,” Groening said. “There is also the poverty aspect to the film.”  

Published in The Express Tribune, September 2nd, 2013.

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