conflict

Starting again in Egypt

A new documentary by filmmaker Jehane Noujaim  illustrates the challenge of rebuilding a country when the social and political structures for running an economy and resolving differences have atrophied through decades of repression.  The Square (2013) traces the intensity of Cairo's Tahrir Square, from the downfall of Mubarak in early 2011 through the overthrow of Morsi in mid 2013.  The film makes sense of the street chaos by focusing on the daily lives of a group of "revolutionaries" from different backgrounds and religions  - people who met each other and Jehane in Tahrir Square: Khalid, an actor/filmmaker; Magdy, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood; Amid, an activist from a working class neighborhood; Ragia, a human rights campaigner; Ramy a singer/song writer; and Aida a filmmaker. The footage is so real you almost feel you are there. Still, the film has more optimism about Egypt than the news reports.

(The trailer has been removed from the web  - in the meantime here is an excerpt shown on BYOD, not yet updated for the Morsi chapter.)


Growth without justice - a film about China

At the New York Film Festival I watched a new film by the Chinese director Jia Zhangke, called A Touch of Sin. It was a strikingly honest and up to date film about corruption, inequality, and what rapid economic transformation can do to the social fabric in China. There are four interconnected stories. The first one is a bit bloody - but bear with it if you are violence averse like me.  

If you get the chance to see any of Jia Zhangke's films, take it.  The Financial Times (September 20, 2013)  calls him one of the top 25 Chinese movers and shakers to watch. 


How does a country heal after civil war?

Act of Killing (2013) is a striking documentary film about the carnage in Indonesia following a coup in the 1960s. A million people are estimated to have died.  Many were Chinese. 

The Director, Joshua Oppenheimer, invites his protagonist, a former leader of the violence, to re-enact his killings.  The co-producer is Errol Morris, master of documentary re-enactments, including his Oscar-winning film Fog of War about Robert McNamara (former US Secretary of Defense and World Bank President), where he uses archival footage to cleverly recreate the context for decisions. 

My experience of Indonesia is only a short 5 days in Jakarta. But I've always wondered what dynamic holds such a seemingly disparate country together. After this film I'm wondering even more.