Some Notes on the Current Situation, directed by Eran Kolirin (The Band’s Visit), comprised of a series of six surreal episodes, is a film about our existential condition.
I had the opportunity to see this film at the Jerusalem
Jewish Film Festival at the Jerusalem Cinematheque, which is taking place
during this week of Chanukah. Following the screening, Eran Kolirin talked
about the fact that the film is purposefully abstract,
similarly, he said, nothing is understood in today’s world. He explained that he was invited to work with
a group of student actors at the Kibbutz Seminar and was given a minimal
budget. This series of episodes are the edited
culmination of the exercises that this class of talented actors performed,
under his direction. (He also wrote the script.)
The first episode is about how we are forced to bang our
heads against the wall, and how everything is upside down and unclear. It
concludes with people shouting “Now, now”, which is a hard-hitting reminder of
all those Saturday night demonstrations when we shouted for the return of the
hostages “now”! The second episode, undoubtedly
the most linear, shows a group of soldiers in military formation, doing theater
exercises in preparation for the production of a film for international streaming. What is their film about, shouts the young
commander. The occupation, social
disparity, apartheid, the inequity of the JNF-controlled lands – but do not
despair, we have nice people here. When
asked about this episode, Kolirin explained that it was the most clear-cut but
that was also a drawback because he prefers things to be more abstract and
therefore, perhaps, more complex and unclear.
In another episode, a man is driving a truck filled with
snow, getting nowhere, just driving ahead. His wife asks him, are you in a
crisis – after all, who isn’t? They are on their way to deliver the snow to a
film production that deals with who or what are human beings.
Even though Kolirin felt that he was directing a very
abstract film which provided him with a tremendous sense of artistic freedom,
his metaphors were hard-hitting and sometimes devastating. The film is very cynical and satirical but at
the same time is very critical of Israeli society, which is going nowhere fast,
if not backwards. The government is pursuing occupation and apartheid, and has
social policies which lead to greater inequity. Not only that, so much of life
here has become absurd, and our government and Knesset have become theater of
the absurd. Our leaders spout nonsense and spin all the time, and they often
make no sense.
This is a serious film made by a very thoughtful and
experienced Israeli filmmaker. While it is artistic and rather vague, it nevertheless
raises profound existential questions: who are we as human beings and what kind
of society have we become?
At this event, Ari Folman (Waltz with Bashir) interviewed
Eran Kolirin on the stage, and shared some insights from his own projects. He
spoke about the fact that cinema as an art form will have a very difficult time
competing with the 200,000 clips from cellphones – both Hamas and Israeli –
that were shot and distributed via social media on October 7th, making
it very difficult to produce an Israeli feature film about the events of
October 7th. He wondered aloud, where will Israeli cinema go from
here?
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