Thierry
Knauff not "Knauf" as erroneously listed under
his photo in the official festival catalogue
says he spent seven years making Wild Blue,
and you have to believe him. Only Werner Herzog can
compare with the dedication of this Belgian film-maker,
who lived for months among the Pygmies to shoot his
1995 film Baka. A Belgian-French co-production,
it won the Golden Conch at the 4th Mumbai (Bombay) International
Film Festival for Documentary, Short And Animation Films
in 1996.
Baka
was shot over a period of several months in the equatorial
rain-forests of southeast Cameroon, where mahogany and
ebony trees are being exploited for commercial gain.
In addition, this hour-long portrait of a primitive
people describes in contrasting black-and-white images
the daily rituals and struggle for existence of the
Baka Pygmies. Although in one sense an ethnographic
film, it contains dramatic
and narrative elements that leave no doubt that the
Pygmies may be a vanishing race if conditions continue
as they are in the rain-forest.
Born
in 1957 in Kinshasa and a graduate from the department
for film directing at INSAS in Bruxelles, Thierry Knauff
has been awarded a number of prizes for his short documentaries
Fin Octobre, Début Novembre
(End Of October, Beginning Of November, 1983);
Le Sphinx (1986); Abattoirs
(1987); Seuls (Alone, 1989); Anton
Webern (1991); Gbanga-Tita (1994);
and Baka (1995). When not on the road
to Africa and elsewhere, he has worked as a programmer
at the Cinémathèque Royale in Bruxelles.
"One of my favourite films is Fredi M Murer's Höhenfeuer
(Alpine Fire, 1985),"
he says, "a Swiss film about incest that's set high
in the Alps and isolated from the communities below."
As
for Wild Blue, his first feature film contending
for Camera d'Or honours, it appears to have been inspired
by his "film poem" on Anton Webern. In other words, this
is a "tone poem" taken from scattered "notes for several
voices" that is, bits of pieces of shot film footage
that was never included in his other films.
The
musical motifs in black-and-white are the bits and pieces
of life: Female voices
and children, wind and trees, a babble of languages
French, German, English, Farsi, Kineruanda, Beti,
Hindi, Serbo-Croat, and Arabic. Punctuated with gestures
and silence, gazes and songs, Wild Blue
unfolds as a statement
on a world afflicted by civil disorders and religious
atrocities. "It seems to me," says Knauff, "that there
is a permanent tension between a world that we know
to be rife with extremes of intolerance and violence
and, at the same time, a world of profound beauty despite
the prevailing horror."
Ron
Holloway
|
| Cast
|
Joan
Leighton, Neela Bhagwat, Charlène Alenga, Dalila
Amali, Sanja Vranes, Kaïga Kayiganwa, Mojgan Cahen,
Françoise Guiguet, Master Drummers Of Burundi
|
| Scr |
Thierry
Knauff |
| Producer |
Fusao
Mineshima |
| Prod
co |
Les Productions du Sablier (Belgium), Artline Films, Man's
Films, Navigator Films, RTBF, La Sept Arte |
| Running
time |
86
min |
| Int'l
Sales |
Films Distributions (Paris)
|
|
|