Saturday 22 June 2013

Natan - showing at the EIFF

66 mins
Ireland
Directors: David Cairns and Paul Duane
Screenwriter: David Cairns.




I'm pretty excited to be at the eiff this year, they've got a brilliant line up of films, so I'll be seeing as many as I can...

First up is Natan.  This was a film I hadn't planned to see and didn't know anything about, but was pleasantly surprised to discover the co-director and writer is an Edinburgh local David Cairns. David is famous in these parts for writing the incredibly successful comedy short Cry For Bob (2001).  He went on to make several more shorts and has also worked on TV, as a film critic and lecturer in film at Edinburgh College of Art. Paul Duane's first feature was Barbaric Genius (2012) which was nominated for an IFTA award. He also co-created TV's Diary of a Call Girl.

Plot 

Natan is meticulously researched documentary about Romanian filmmaker Natan the driving force in French cinema early last century who has all but been obscured from history.
Natan was born in Romania to Jewish parents but moved to France in the early 1900s where he began his career in films. A prolific filmmaker he became the most influential man in the business during the 20s and 30s working as a screenwriter, producer and director. His innovations and entrepreneurialism turned around languishing film company Pathe turning it into a main player in the industry and a training ground for young filmmakers of the time.  

One of his own favourite films from the period was Les Miserables about a poor man who becomes rich and powerful, but whose career is destroyed by a petty crime from his past. Ironically the story reflects Natan's own life.  As the Nazi's invade France Natan is accused of being a pornographer and swindler, accusations which could be true or anti Semitic propaganda.

Review

This film is fascinating, incredibly interesting, touching and sad. It’s story telling of the finest order but there are a few niggles. The film could have done without the juxtaposition of archive footage with modern footage masquerading as archive footage.  It didn't work and was distracting.  Some of the imagery felt it had been slotted in because the filmmakers couldn't find footage to tell the story, long shots of film spooling through a camera comes to mind.

Other times the imagery is stunning even chilling, for example the blood red water in the fountain as the Nazi's invade France.   I also found the faux narration from Natan obtrusive, perhaps a traditional approach would have worked better.

But the criticism is trivial and this film really is wonderful and well worth seeing, hopefully the filmmakers have a deal on the table as this film deserves a wider audience.

No comments:

Post a Comment