Country: Slovenia
Title: Dancing in
the Rain / Ples v Dezju (1961)
Peter is a painter, but he spends most of his time morosely
drinking at a local dive. Marusa is an actress, but she’s past her prime and
skips rehearsals to mope. The two are considered a couple within their limited
circle, but it’s a warped, emotionally-abusive relationship always on the
rocks. The theater’s pipsqueak line-prompter is in love with Marusa, who’s in
love Peter, who’s in love with a nonexistent ideal. Contempt flows back in the
other direction. They drink deeply and frequently of alcohol and bitterness.
They dream, fantasize and delude themselves to stave off encroaching despair. We watch them as a day passes and the rain rolls in.
Having laid out that heavy-sounding summary, it might be hard to believe that
this is an absolutely beautiful film, astounding in its technical ingenuity and
abundant imagination. Director Bostjan Hladnik eagerness to play with filmcraft
enlivens the rather dire noirish plot and his impatience to experiment, instead
of obfuscating the story, serve to better express the psychology of his characters. His bag of tricks includes graphic matches and jump cuts, 360
degree roving camera movements, dream sequences and their surreal geographies,
unexpected camera angles and focus pulls, close ups that pull out only to
redefine the space with new surprises and abrupt transitions into flashbacks or
fantasies often without an edit. One touch that I especially liked was a young
couple, lost in their hermetic puppy love, who mysteriously haunt the
backgrounds and tail-ends of almost every scene (including even a dream
sequence!). Are they glimpses of Peter/Marusa’s past? A metaphor for their
albatrosses of ideal love? A reminder that the cycle of innocence and
disillusionment repeats itself with each new generation? Mere contrast with
Peter Marusa’s failing relationship?
Even more radical and unique is Hladnik’s sound design, which
uses often highly unrealistic volume modulation, misleading aural cues and internal
monologues from shifting perspectives to create a subjective soundscape. Not
every idea works (one scenes has Peter chasing Marusa at an unconvincingly lazy
pace so that the camera can keep up), but it’s refreshing to see a film take so
many risks.
Hladnik’s visual virtuosity and willingness to experiment
reflect the influence of Ingmar Bergman and Robert Siodmak and would have fit
right at home in the New Waves then blossoming in France, Czechoslovakia and
Japan. Sadly, he remains in obscurity outside of Slovenia.
2 comments:
This also sounds awesome. I like the sound of all the attempts to break out of the conventional bounds!
One of several film atlas discoveries I'd give a perfect 10/10. Peru's The Green Wall and Poland's Land of Promise were two others.
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