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Venice Reviews: Fatih Akin's 'The Cut' Stars Tahir Rahim, Saverio

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  • Venice Reviews: Fatih Akin's 'The Cut' Stars Tahir Rahim, Saverio

    Indie Wire
    Sept 2 2014


    Venice Reviews: Fatih Akin's 'The Cut' Stars Tahir Rahim, Saverio
    Costanza's 'Hungry Hearts' Stars Adam Driver

    Festivals
    by Tom Christie

    "The Cut" is Fatih Akin's reach for the big time, and sad to say he
    comes up short. The popular German-Turkish director has made a lot of
    different kinds of films, from inter-cultural dramas ("Head On") and
    comedies ("Soul Kitchen"), to romantic comedy/road-trips ("In July")
    and documentaries ("Crossing the Bridge: The Sound of Istanbul"). "The
    Cut" is meant to be his big, beautiful epic tale, but it falls
    mysteriously flat straight out of the blocks.

    It's 1915 and WWI has cast its long shadow on Turkey. Nazaret
    Manoogian is an Armenian blacksmith, played here by the
    French-Algerian actor Tahar Rahim, who was so wonderful in "The
    Prophet." We have barely met Nazaret and his family when Turkish
    soldiers haul all the men off to be a soldier, which means that they
    are used as slave labor until they either die or are killed, their
    women and children meanwhile sent to a remote camp where most of them
    starve to death. As their great fortune would have it, Nazaret and his
    daughters manage to survive, and once that is established the film
    follows his search for the girls - across the Middle East to Cuba to
    Minnesota. Honestly, there is not much more to it than that.

    Of course, the survival and search is moving, and sometimes harrowing
    (well, a bit) and you very much want Nazaret to succeed (more or
    less). But that is not to say that you feel greatly for this
    character, or any other in "The Cut." Sadly, Rahim seems a bit out of
    it, not quite able to muster the necessary emotional connection to the
    audience or anyone else. It doesn't help that when Nazaret was nearly
    killed, his vocal chords were damaged and he loses his ability to
    speak, so this is largely a silent performance.

    In one sense, this is a blessing. After consulting Roman Polanski,
    who once used the same strategy, Akin chose to have all of the
    Armenians speak English, which gives the film a cheesy old-Hollywood
    feel. (In one early scene, Nazaret and his daughters painfully bid a
    woman to "have a nice day"!) But unfortunately Rahim's mute serves as
    a moment-to-moment reminder of the distance between the character and
    his audience.

    Ironically, the most life we see out of him is when he catches a
    Charlie Chaplin film, but beyond that there is a passivity the film is
    unable to overcome right up to the end. As Nazaret and his remaining
    family walked off into the Midwestern landscape, I felt no elation,
    just sadness - for the director. To say this is an anti-climax is to
    be understated. With its grand historical and geographical scale,
    nicely rendered by cinematographer Rainer Klausmann and the production
    team, "The Cut" will find an audience, just not the one Akin was
    hoping for. (NYT feature here.)

    I had no expectations for Italian director Saverio Costanza's "Hungry
    Hearts," having not seen his earlier "The Solitude of Prime Numbers"
    (2010), so it was a pleasant surprise when it spooled out in such a
    charming manner - an Italian woman, Mina (Alba Rohrwacher), meets Jude
    (Adam Driver) in the restroom of a New York Chinese restaurant when
    the door gets stuck. It's not exactly love at first sight - or smell -
    but soon there is sex and then a pregnancy and then a wedding, nicely
    mixed over "Oh, What a Feeling!" All is happiness: Mina is lovely and
    Jude is ecstatic. (Never mind the weird dream Mina has about a hunter
    shooting a deer outside of the restaurant where they had their wedding
    reception.) Finally, there's a baby boy, and here's where things start
    to get a little hinky.

    It turns out that Mina has very strong feelings about giving birth and
    raising her child in a natural manner, even to the point of risking
    her and the boy's life in the birth process, which begins at home and
    ends up in the hospital with a caesarean - something Jude promised her
    he would not allow. (Now consider his name...) Seven months later,
    Mina is feeding the baby rather strange natural foods and oils, no
    meat, and both mother and son are worryingly thin. She has not taken
    the baby outside in all of this time, for fear of contamination, and
    when Jude comes home he has to wash his hands before she allows him to
    hold his son. Is she depressed? Crazy? Jude rebels (betrays?) and on
    her first day back at work he takes the baby to the doctor, who
    recommends an immediate catch-up diet of meat and vitamins. At home
    again, he tells Mina what he's done and what the doctor said, and
    insists that the new diet be followed. So begins an epic struggle.

    It goes to extreme - some might say absurd -- levels of insistence,
    distrust, hurt and anger, building to a climax that, like the one in
    Francesco Munzi's "Black Souls," feels a little too writerly, a little
    forced, and quite unnecessary. Rohrwacher and Driver are terrific,
    nevertheless, and Costanza certainly knows how to tell - and show - a
    story, particularly in the details. He should do more of it, but next
    time with a story that doesn't force its audience to either buy in or
    buy out. No more dreams about dead deer, please.


    http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/venice-reviews-akins-the-cut-stars-rahim-costanzas-hungry-hearts-stars-driver-20140902

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