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Shot Faraway..
So Close : DISTANT
Distant, recipient of both the Grand Prix and Best Actor prizes at this most recent Cannes, and, as such, perhaps one of that festival’s few clearly discernible winners, is a Turkish film with a significantly more art-house-friendly pedigree. Written, directed, produced, lit, shot, and edited by Ceylan, it easily lends itself to auteur association, and its disengaged, articulate imagery, spread across unhurried takes, has the sheen of willful artistry. Really though, it’s just the sterile flipside of those old, haywire Turk cheapies; which approach seems to attract the most awards is no secret. With all this in mind, it’s not difficult to detect the snobbery in Roger Ebert’s flatulent missive from “the worst-ever Cannes” decrying “fashionably dead films in which shots last forever” featuring “grim middle-aged men with moustaches (who) sit and look and think and smoke,” targeting Cannes regulars Kiarostami and Angelopolos specifically, but Ceylan by proxy. In fact it’s the paucity of resources and careful economy at work in Distant that give the film its most winning qualities; every lighting gag is as proudly displayed and as appropriately impressive as a bank-breaking special effect, and the remarkable clarity of each image glows with a palpably handmade and pored-over feeling. The narrative of Ceylan’s movie,
when pared down to synopsis, is basically made up of standard-issue city
mouse/country mouse and Odd Couple material. Yusif (Mehmet Emin Toprak)
is an early thirtysomething hinterlander who leaves behind his work-impoverished
village and dependent mother to seek send-home paychecks on the docks
of Istanbul. During his days in the metropolis he conducts a futile and
increasingly half-hearted search for employment, eventually just wandering
the city’s shopping malls and oblique mid-winter streets. He lodges with
his grudgingly accommodating hometown-boy-made-good cousin Mahmut (Muzaffer
Özdemir), an erudite, spiritually rigor-mortised middle-aged commercial
photographer who, we learn by way of dinner party conversation, once wanted
to “make films like Tarkovsky,” but now shrugs with tossed-off certainty
that “photography is dead, man.” The casting of our antagonistic Felix
and Oscar, both nonprofessional actors, is spot-on; the quiet enmity which
eventually defines the duo’s relationship registers in just a glance at
their incongruous features: Toprak’s empathetic mug, with its broad, open
guilelessness, is in sharp relief to Özdemir’s rumpled-in facial topography,
unreadable behind a smear of ashen whiskers. The film makes it quite evident, however, that despite the self-gained affluence which Mahmut wags chidingly at Yusif, the photographer is paralyzed by just as many—and subtler—agonies than his subsistence-minded cousin. Not that this contributes to any feeling of camaraderie; the company of men, it would seem, does little for misery, and Distant at its best is a great and deeply felt film about a uniquely masculine register of urban solitude. During Yusif’s daily, directionless cross-city walks, the camera isolates and lingers on passing females, faces and figures sometimes far off or barely discerned, only to watch them connect with waited-on boyfriends. As the observer’s faint hope drops away with a trap-door snap, one almost gasps at the swift chill of snuffed potentialities. In these scenes of an aimless Yusif adrift in his meek libido, sauntering at a safe distance behind pretty young anythings, or of Mahmut waiting for his unwanted flat-mate to turn in so he can impassively watch videos of peroxide blondes suckling one another in affected ecstasy, Ceylan records the fragile solo rituals of nagging sex with neither discernible tenderness nor sniggering disassociation, only unflagging honesty. At any rate, the moment when Yusif splays his legs for a moment of connection-through-frottage on the subway will register uncomfortably with anyone who’s added a patch of brightness to their day via a well-timed brush on the L train. For all these qualities, there’s something naggingly unsatisfying about Distant, especially in the closing chapters when Yusif leaves Mahmut’s apartment and the film ends without so much as a goodbye note; the lone ember of human warmth that Toprak lends the movie is snuffed as he evaporates into the off-screen void with the clean quietude of an Antonioni heroine. But more problematic is that Ceylan’s movie never quite acquires the steadily smothering, heel-to-the-throat viscerality of the Italian filmmaker’s best; more often it feels as frozen and blankly articulate as the sheets of fresh-fallen snow that erase this wintry Istanbul. The director has doggedly set his focus on a void, striving throughout to capture people only incidentally, but the spaces between them specifically, until finally, with an unimpeachable logic, dead-ending with a steady-handed zoom into Özdemir’s arid, untranslatable visage. Says Ceylan of Distant in Cahiers du cinéma: “My first intention was to make a film on the emptiness of life, the sensation of the void and uselessness.” It’s a barren intention that’s rigorously followed through; there’s a real sense of unity in this so-aptly-named film, and if structural integrity is a measure of artistic success, then Ceylan may have constructed a kind-of seamless masterpiece. Distant is the sort of spare, demanding
work whose pared-down aesthetic requires a viewer who’s prepared to abnegate
movie going’s instant gratifications. It’s the cinematic equivalent of
fasting, undertaken with hopes of a glimpse at something larger than ourselves
or at least larger than the screen, and of epiphanies beyond the facile
pat-on-the-ass pep talks provided by mere “entertainment.” But as much
as I admire Ceylan’s movie, I can’t help feeling that its overarching
meagerness of design carries over into a leanness of spirit; the film
is so singular and streamlined in its trajectory toward, well, “the emptiness
of life,” it seems completely without room for the digressions, confusions,
and general tousle of genuine spiritual inquiry; at times it feels as
dry as a movie made by a slightly more self-aware and motivated Mahmut,
which it almost definitely is. Of course when commencing to argue the
case for or against transcendence at the movies one soon ends up knee-deep
in the inexplicable, and impugning the validity of someone else’s revelation
is the ultimate critical cul de sac. I can only allow this: For those
who happen to see the face of God in Ceylan’s work, the fact that I sometimes
found myself wishing the theme from Indiana Jones would come blaring onto
the film’s soundtrack must thusly be attributed to my own lack of spiritual
development. * Distant will open in New York on January 9, 2004.
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