
The high point of my Saturday at the festival was interviewing Shonali Bose and Nilesh Maniyar, the directors of the Competition Documentary entry, A Fly on the Wall, which is about a friend of theirs, Chika Kapadia, who, after being diagnosed with terminal thyroid cancer and given less than two months to live, decided to undergo assisted suicide in Switzerland and invited the filmmakers to record his last days, including his death. The movie has a certain rough appeal in that the two directors, who had never made a documentary before, knew they couldn’t plan what would happen, though they tried their best to at least be prepared for anything. The difficulties started from the get-go. Bose has dual citizenship, India and US, while Maniyar has only Indian citizenship, and Switzerland requires Indian nationals to apply for a visa, which took time that Kapadia didn’t have, so while Bose stayed with Kapadia for the rest of his days and is the co-center of the film, Maniyar stayed behind in India and directed remotely, sifting through the recordings Bose made on her iPhone. Several times during this recording, Kapadia almost called it off for one reason or another—family objections, his own doubts as to the ethics of the project (he took seriously one commenter on his blog accusing him of being “elitist and judgmental”). But while he and Bose talk at great length about the right to end one’s own life, a view that offends many people, the overall documentary is less an issue film than one about an extraordinary individual who, in line with his outlook on life, was very determined in his choice of how and when to die. Kapadia was trained as an electrical engineer, which made him semi-wealthy, and then threw it all away to become a standup comedian, and later, being a dedicated diver, abandoned that line of work to move to Bali and become a professional scuba diver. While such a person’s dedication and ambition is certainly admirable, it doesn’t take much imagination to see that such a person can also be arrogant, and much of the drama in the film is derived from his attitude and how it clashed with Bose, who was trying at once to satisfy his wishes and make a film that had meaning, because it wasn’t as if she’d have any chances of doing retakes. After I return from Busan, I will transcribe the interview and post it on this blog. It was a remarkable conversation.
The other films I saw yesterday were less impressive, but I don’t know if that was a matter of contrast. Certainly, I was disappointed with Jia Zhang-ke’s newest film, Caught by the Tides, which I had been looking forward to probably the most. Made during the pandemic, the movie is a clever collage of used and unused footage from previous features, as well as new footage that could be shot under rather strict circumstances. The result is a film that attempts to review the last 20-odd years of Chinese economic development through Jia’s jaundiced eye and structure it as a kind of romantic tragedy. Zhao Tao plays a dancer-entertainer in Datong in 2001, the same character she played in Unknown Pleasures, whose boyfriend, a ne’er-do-well played by Li Zhubin, decides to leave town and try to take advantage of the coming economic boom. Eventually, Zhao goes looking for him, taking her to various places that Jia covered in his intervening body of work. The film’s structure is necessarily loose and free-form, moving from documentary realism to semi-staged dramatic tableaux and slightly stylized musical numbers (the music, I will have to say, is impressively used). And while Jia succeeded in what he set out to do, the film didn’t move me, probably because the connecting plot never felt organic enough to pull me in. In the end, when Li just returns to Datong because he’s tired and disabled by a stroke, it feels anticlimactic.
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