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Cairo: Nostalgia

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  • Cairo: Nostalgia

    Al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
    29 October - 4 November 2009

    Nostalgia


    Back from the third round of MEIFF, Hani Mustafa follows a string of
    concern with the past in several of the Arab films screened there


    Regional film events provide a rare opportunity to assess a large
    number of films from a particular part of the world at a particular
    point in time, and where possible register a single characteristic
    running through a large number of them. At the Middle East
    International Film Festival, which closed last Saturday, one idea
    informing the Arab films on the programme was concern with time: its
    passage, and the effect of its unfolding on people (or characters).
    Several films concerned themselves with history, whether to review a
    particular episode from the past or to engage with the beauty of times
    past. Such over-the-board interest in time might drive the critic to a
    rushed judgement to the effect that Arab cinema is digging up old
    glories or indulging in nostalgia for its own sake. Yet a fair number
    of the films on the MEIFF programme effectively eschewed such shallow
    nostalgia, opting for a serious probing of the past to make contact
    with their roots or to present an informed and profound view of the
    present.

    One such film, which dealt with history deeply and with technical
    prowess, was The Time that Remains by the Palestinian filmmaker Elia
    Suleiman, who managed to skilfully interweave the personal and the
    political -- a formula he employed in his previous films, whether
    features or shorts. Suleiman's cultural specificity -- his status as
    an Arab Israeli -- gives his films a contradictory flavour, a kind of
    dialectic present in all his works starting with his first short The
    Gulf War... What Next? Screened at the Ismailia Documentary and Short
    Film Festival in 1993, it presented a clear view of one Arab Israeli
    in exile, and his contradictory feelings on hearing (false) news that
    Saddam would be targeting Tel Aviv with Scud missiles. On the one
    hand, as a dispossessed Arab, he is excited; on the other, he is
    deeply concerned for his mother, who lives in Nazareth (a few
    kilometres away from Tel Aviv).

    The Palestinian cause is routinely depicted in a clichéd and direct
    way by the vast majority of Palestinian directors and thereby makes
    for weak films. Yet as Suleiman demonstrated in Divine Intervention
    (which received the Grand Jury Award in Cannes 2002), it is possible
    to deal with the Palestinian cause in a human and artistic way -- an
    approach he also took in The Time that Remains, which featured in the
    official competition of the Cannes Film Festival this year and
    received the Best Middle East Film Award at MEIFF.

    Yet participation in prestigious festivals, and even prizes, is less
    important in a film than that film's structural innovation or ability
    to present new cinematic values. Suleiman presents an extremely
    sensitive political issue with powerful irony and the narrative skill
    of Charlie Chaplin. The Time that Remains is especially characterised
    by lack of dialogue, so much so that the last quarter of the film is
    completely devoid of dialogue. The film opens with Suleiman himself
    arriving in Israel from abroad. On his way to his city, Nazareth, rain
    and lightning force the taxi driver to stop so that he ends up alone
    with the director in the car, surrounded by bad weather.

    And as if Suleiman is asking himself how he ended up in this
    situation, in a flashback he moves back in time to 1948, when the Arab
    armies were first defeated and Palestine occupied. Suleiman employs an
    episodic technique, telling his tale through a series of sketches. In
    one such episode, an armed man walks briskly with a serious expression
    before a group of young men at a café with their weapons on the table.
    They ask where he is going, and the armed man answers mechanically,
    hand on gun, that he is on his way to liberate Tiberias. Nonchalantly
    they tell him it has already been liberated, and surprised he asks
    about another Palestinian village, and they point in the opposite
    direction. He moves briskly with the same seriousness, and seconds
    later they ask him where he is going, he tells them, and they say it
    too has been liberated. A very powerful example of Suleiman's sarcasm,
    this scene: the director continues to tell the story in this temporal
    framework without there being any development on the dramatic front.
    The rhythm of the film remains slow and plodding year after year.

    First, Suleiman documents the signing of his city's surrender to the
    Israeli army, then the escape of many of its people to Jordan. As for
    the director's own father, who is part of the resistance and
    manufactures weaponry, stops doing so after he is tortured. The film
    depicts the state of depression into which the father then falls, with
    his life reduced to sitting idly in the house or fishing with a
    friend. Dramatic succession is not essential to The Time that Remains.
    The importance of the film derives from the poetic state of mind it
    induces through repetition and subtle cross referencing. Suleiman
    however seems to have lost much of the humour with which Divine
    Intervention was infused -- which made the film seem, to many of those
    who have followed his work, a purely black comedy full of a sense of
    defeat.

    ***

    The element of time is equally important in Heliopolis by the young
    filmmaker Ahmed Abdallah, named after the Cairo neighbourhood (also
    known as Masr Al-Gedida) -- even though time in this film is almost
    constantly at a standstill due to the static state in which the film's
    ordinary heroes find themselves as they face -- or rather fail to face
    -- their tedious lives. They have desires and ambitions, but there are
    no major dramatic shifts in their lives. The screenplay progresses
    along a number of intersecting rather than interwoven lines: a
    distinctive style not so alien to Egyptian cinema. Many Egyptian films
    in recent times have employed this technique -- Cabaret (2008) and
    Al-Farah (The Wedding, 2009), for example, both written by
    screenwriter Ahmed Abdallah, to be distinguished from the present
    director.

    The film, which takes place in the course of a single day, opens with
    the young academic Ibrahim (Khaled Abul-Naga), who appears to be
    extremely exhausted on the morning of a new day as he rushes to his
    meeting with an elderly woman (Aida Abdel-Aziz) whom he is to
    interview as one of a few members of Jewish families left in Egypt.
    She lives in an old flat in one of Heliopolis's distinctive buildings.
    This line of drama is unclear and raises a number of questions: What
    is the object of Ibrahim's research? Is he exploring minorities in
    Egypt (as he tells the lady) or the architecture of Heliopolis (as he
    tells the officer who stops him while he shoots video in Korba)? Or is
    it that he simply feels emotional about Heliopolis? The film does not
    answer this question before it ends, but simply tells of Ibrahim's
    tragedy when the girl he loves leaves him to marry another. The film
    does not seek to explain Ibrahim's emotional state even though it ends
    with an emotionally charged answering-machine message in his beloved's
    voice (the voice over is by Hind Sabri) in which she apologises for
    leaving him.

    Another line in the film concerns a young woman (Hanan Mutawi') who
    works at the Heliopolis Hotel while telling her family that she works
    in Paris. In the third, a young couple are trying to find a flat in
    which to live. The man they phone with a view to buying his flat, Dr
    Hani (Hani Adel), makes up yet another dramatic line: his entire
    family have immigrated to Canada and while he waits to obtain the visa
    and harbours an implicit love for his neighbour (Yossra El-Lozi). In
    addition to these juxtapositions, there is another altogether
    different drama that feels as though it is a separate, short film
    included in the script. It concerns a police guard whose service is in
    the vicinity of a church who practises his usual rituals listening to
    old songs, eating bread and cheese, smoking. His intense loneliness is
    broken only by friendship with a small street dog whom he feeds and
    plays with.

    Remarkable in this film is the director's attempt to provide drama
    that intentionally eschews development and concentrates on stillness.
    Time alone moves forward, with the film ending as the day ends. Yet
    structurally such films require much effort and effective story
    telling. It also requires that the film should have aesthetic values
    other than dramatic development as such: stand-alone situations or
    powerful characterisation, for example, with their expression and
    dialogue revealing their detail. Sadly Heliopolis has no such values.
    More accurately, it does -- but only incompletely. It may indeed be
    that the film was cut too harshly in the editing for the narrative to
    remain whole. There is a huge difference between what might be missing
    on purpose -- to let the viewer complete in her own head -- and what
    is missing due to faulty craftsmanship. I feel that the director, who
    is also the screenwriter, attempted a new experiment in film. He has
    said that since the beginning he sought to write a script with very
    little or no dialogue, drafting the dialogue together with the actors
    before filming. As a result the film seems like the result of team
    work, emerging from the actors themselves. Technically, some of the
    footage Ibrahim collects of the streets of Heliopolis resembles
    documentary film -- not a fault in itself. Yet this documentary drive
    seems to have involved the director a little more than necessary, and
    he was so involved in it that he seems to have succumbed to the
    pleasure of chronicling to the point of neglecting narrative.

    ***

    The problematic relation between time and place is central to
    filmmaking in general and it becomes perhaps more intense in
    documentaries -- as evidenced by the many possible responses to the
    documentary Giran (Neighbours) by Tahani Rashed. At one level, the
    problematic relation between place and time can be seen as a
    historical, political conflict played out in the Cairo neighbourhood
    of Garden City between the state of affairs prior to and after the
    July Revolution. At the outset of the film the nationalist-inclined
    viewer might feel that Rashed is critiquing Nasser and the Revolution
    -- since Garden City was aesthetically destroyed under Nasser.
    Likewise the interviews with the son of the Wafd Party official Fouad
    Serageddin -- a symbol of pre-July politics -- as well as with Mursi
    Saad El-Din and other members of the aristocracy: all suggest that
    Rashed is critiquing the Revolution. By the end of the film, however,
    the position on the Revolution has changed as the novelist-dentist
    Alaa El-Aswani and the late Marxist philosopher Mahmoud Amin El-Alim
    express support for it.

    By the time the film ended Arab critics felt they had seen a film not
    only about Garden City or politics but also a film about Egyptian
    society as a whole. Some even felt the film had adequately registered
    the humanity of Arab societies and how horribly time has managed to
    crush that humanity on several grounds. The director employs a range
    of instruments, moving through a series of smooth and enjoyable
    scenes. The viewer encounters cats sleeping on top of cars in the
    shaded avenues of Garden City, long shots of children playing football
    there, and every aspect of life in that neighbourhood in a holistic
    and effective mould. It presents the complex class formation that
    makes up the neighbourhood, including the remains of expatriates who
    made up the long- gone cosmopolitanism of Cairo. It also touches on
    the presence in Garden City of, first, the British Embassy (which was
    the political pivot of the Middle East until the middle of the 20th
    century) and, later, the American Embassy (which has performed the
    same function since) -- and the intense state of security associated
    with it, a troubled connection with the political Other inducing much
    fear and concern with the future.

    While Abdallah offers in Heliopolis a static state, Rashed presents an
    extremely fast-paced dynamism in depicting the deterioration of the
    quality of life in Cairo's prestigious neighbourhoods. Yet in both
    cases nostalgia was a driving force, with the one slow and exhausted,
    the other brisk and strong.

    ***

    Time is of course an essential element in cinematic structure, but few
    films manage to approach history without being drawn into the
    sanctimoniousness and rhetorical flourish with which history is
    usually presented. This is something Ahmed Maher manages to achieve in
    Al-Musafir (The Traveller), which opened MEIFF and in which the
    director uses history as a completely empty grid on which to travel
    back in a purely philosophical way to the genesis of the main
    character: the anti- or rather a-hero, Hassan (Khaled El-Nabawi, Omar
    Sharif), the earliest manifestation of which genesis takes place on an
    autumn day in 1948. It is a year that has its own significance, which
    the director nonetheless brushes aside. He is merely searching for the
    formative elements of generations that result from the union of
    Hassan, an Egyptian young man, and Nora, an Armenian young woman.

    Yet Maher takes this idea to the extreme, not only avoiding historical
    references but also sticking with the implied and the uncertain where
    his characters' fate is concerned. Opening in 1948, the script does
    not even mention the Nakba but attempts rather to document the
    development of a particular family in Egyptian history, following the
    same method in the autumn of 1973 and again in the autumn of 2001. But
    in so doing it does not rest content with avoiding any reference to
    the events in question -- the October War, 9/11 -- but also places the
    viewer in a state of uncertainty regarding what happens to the
    characters themselves. This seems to be yet another, uniquely
    cinematic use of time. The Arab story, it seems, is still driven by
    history -- but judging by the variety and power of the films on offer
    in MEIFF, Arab directors are finally approaching history in new and
    interesting ways, using it to tell their stories of all that is human
    rather than letting it control and tell its stories through them.

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/970/cu3.htm
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