Gaston Solnicki's debut narrative feature
abstractly depicts the day-to-day lives of several young Argentine women.
Argentine filmmaker Gaston Solnicki's
debut narrative feature Kekszakallu,
recently showcased at the New York Film Festival, poses an interesting
conundrum for a critic. A plot description for the bewildering, experimental
drama feels almost impossible, so I'm going to excerpt from the official
synopsis:
"Kékszakállú is
an unconventional portrayal of several young women witnessed in immersive yet
indeterminate states: within their bodies, among their friends and lovers, and
ultimately in a culture of economic and spiritual recession. The torpor of
boredom and privilege is undercut by the vicissitudes of Argentina’s economic
malaise, forcing the offspring of a vanishing upper class to extricate
themselves from the props of familial privilege. The film presents a
documentary-like exposure of the quotidian while extending possibilities for
redemption among this brood of the weary. Obliquely inspired by Bela Bartok’s
sole opera, Kékszakállú radically
transposes the portent of Bluebeard’s Castle into
something far less recognizable: a tale of generational inertia, situated
between the alternating and precisely rendered tableaux of work and repose in
Buenos Aires and Punta del Este."
Fortunately, it's easier to get through the
film itself than the description, although not by much. The movie depicts the
day-to-day lives of several comely young women (often in various states of
undress) and the men in their orbit as they experience periods of both
recreation and work. The thematic links to Bartok's opera, passages of which
are used throughout on the soundtrack, are tenuous at best, inexplicable at
worst.
A minimalist, cinematic tone poem, the
film eschews narrative structure in favor of attempting to convey the emotional
states of its thinly drawn characters as they enter adulthood. The dreamlike
images are certainly arresting, whether they're showing the young woman
frolicking in a pool, studying for exams, working in a factory or engaging in
household activities. The proceedings are marked by a sensuous, tactile quality
that, for a while at least, holds your attention even if you don't really know
what's going on.
But a little of this sort of thing goes a long
way, and despite its brief, 72-minute running time, the lethargic, repetitive
film's themes of alienation and ennui are all too easily transferred to the
viewer.
Venue: New York Film Festival
Production companies: Filmy Wiktora, Frutacine
Cast: Laila Maltz, Katia Szechtman, Lara Tarlowski, Natali Maltz, Maria Soldi, Pedro Trocca, Denise Groesman
Director: Gaston Solnicki
Producers: Ivan Eibuszyc, Gaston Solnicki
Directors of photography: Diego Poleri, Fernando Lockett
Editors: Alan Segal, Francisco D'Eufemia
Composer: Bela Bartok
Production companies: Filmy Wiktora, Frutacine
Cast: Laila Maltz, Katia Szechtman, Lara Tarlowski, Natali Maltz, Maria Soldi, Pedro Trocca, Denise Groesman
Director: Gaston Solnicki
Producers: Ivan Eibuszyc, Gaston Solnicki
Directors of photography: Diego Poleri, Fernando Lockett
Editors: Alan Segal, Francisco D'Eufemia
Composer: Bela Bartok
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