Reykjavík Grapevine - 15.07.2011, Blaðsíða 40

Reykjavík Grapevine - 15.07.2011, Blaðsíða 40
Who needs oil when you have rain? Free admission 10 am to 6 pm every day. Route information at www.landsvirkjun.com/visitors Landsvirkjun is one of Europe’s leading renewable energy companies Visit our new interactive exhibition on renewable energy at Búrfell Power Station. 40 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10 — 2011 Art | Films Can We Capture Iceland? Reverend John, who will not leave his land and becomes the prisoner of his own loneliness and depression, is he Iceland? Old men, reminiscing about an old sports field, are they Iceland? The Reykjavík 9, accused of attacking the powers that be, are they Iceland? Young men, run- ning like madmen, are they Iceland? Missed opportunities, the dreams we never followed through with, are they Iceland? The small town that withers away around us, is that Ice- land? The cancer we conquer, is that Iceland? Can we capture reality? This was the headline of a panel held at the Skjald- borg film festival. That is one of the eternal questions of documentary film- making (although one that often ends up as: what is reality?) but Skjaldborg is a festival for Icelandic documentaries, so the question that is perhaps more rel- evant for this festival is: can we capture Iceland? It's certainly a task beyond a single film, but a body of diverse work may be up to the task, even if the real Iceland will probably always be just outside the camera's reach. A SHORT HISTORICAL BACKGROUND "We do not only have to show our coun- try’s beauty, to attract tourists. We also have to show the outside world that here resides a cultured nation, that has culture both old and new, a nation of as high a standard as other Nordic coun- tries". Thus wrote a film critic in Mor- gunbla!i! in 1925, in an article about a film by Loftur Gu!mundsson, a film the unnamed critic never bothers to mention by name. He goes on and calls for the film to be shorn of the ugly bits before it gets shown to foreigners, and it be- comes quite clear he doesn't mean the scenes that don't work cinematically, but simply the scenes that he does not find flattering towards the nation—and finally the writer concludes: "... everyone must do their part to give the outside world the prettiest and best picture, when the foreign public first gets to know our na- tion in their cinemas". But this notion, of filmmaking as mere tourism propaganda, is not just an ancient relic: "Film is one of the most pertinent forms of promoting a country and has huge influence on the stream of tourists the world over". This quote does not come from the aforementioned 1925 article, it's from one entitled "Filmmak- ing and tourism" that was published in Fréttabla!i! in 2010. It’s written by Björn Brynjúlfur Björnsson, film director and then-head of the Icelandic Academy of Film and Television. It seems that the article from 1925 had proved prophetic, and Björn goes on to state how TV show ‘Nonni & Manni’ increased tourism from German speaking countries and how ‘Children Of Nature’ increased Japa- nese tourism to Iceland by 27,8 percent and from this concludes: "According to research, 18% of all travellers come to Iceland directly because of films". The article is written around the crux of the ‘Inspired by Iceland’ campaign, but mostly in response to the cuts in film funding by the government. Fighting those cuts, which were more severe than in other art forms, is a worthy cause—but it is strange that nowhere in the article is artistic value mentioned, or the roles that films can have in dissecting a soci- ety whose ills the economic collapse had made so painfully visible. Those kinds of film might capture Iceland, but they'll hardly capture too many tourists, right? And that bond between filmmakers, ad- vertisers and the tourism industry has of- ten felt a bit too tight, not by way of Coca Cola bottles placed in odd places in the frame, rather because of long dramatic shots of landscape that had very little to do with story or character but much more with presenting the image that has been demanded since, at least, 1925. A9AINST THE CLERGY And looking at the list of films for Skjald- borg beforehand I was a bit apprehensive this could be the case all too often. The selection seemed to be rather skewed towards nature and villages, the old cli- chés of Iceland we use to charm tourists with, but are getting quite bored with ourselves, considering about 60–70% of us live in the capital area. Thankfully, most of those films truly tried their best to be critical, yet compassionate, of their subject matters. “Adequate Beings” (‘Land míns fö!ur’) takes place in Dalirnir, an area we passed on the way to the festival in Patreksfjör!ur, and while it is perhaps short on story, it's long on mood. And that mood is a common one for Icelandic villages, the mood of a once proud and bustling town that has seen most of its people flee a crumbling economy and lack of jobs. In the case of this town it Thoughts in the wake of the Skjaldborg documentary festival
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