|
 |
|
The Man Without a Past
**1/2
Cinema
Reviews - Week of February 21, 2003
Rated on a 4-star scale. Certificate 12A. Finland/
Germany/ France. 97 minutes. Written and directed by Aki Kaurismaki. Starring
Markku Peltola, Kati Outinen, Annikki Tähti, Juhani Niemelä, Kaija
Pakarinen, Sakari Kuosmanen, Esko Nikkari, Outi Mäenpää, Pertti
Sveholm, Aino Seppo.
The man is napping on a bench when the thugs attack,
and when they are finished with him, he is capable of little but being dragged
to hospital. On the operating table he is wrapped head to toe in bandages
before being pronounced dead. He rises, puts on some pants, and drifts to
an unfamiliar city. You'd think that if he could get through all that, he
could manage to retain his memory, too. But give the guy a
break.
Aki Kaurismaki's "The Man Without a Past"
stars Markku Peltola as the man, who modestly slumps around Helsinki
dockland without a memory in his head or much obvious anxiousness to get
his recollections back. A man and his wife give Peltola a meal, and help
him find a shack in which to live. They go about their business, more or
less expressionlessly. Peltola does the same.
The movie is a strange, quiet little comedy --
one of stillness and distance, as the camera abstractly holds on random messes
of objects, and the soundtrack captures the drabness of the wind. Within
this atmosphere emerge odd characters, like the landlord who names his peaceful
dog Hannibal and assures that the quiet creature is capable of eating a man.
Or the policeman who takes an instant disliking to our hero, and engages
in a battle of wills with his lawyer, as the two of them sit and play a chess
match of precedents and legal clauses.
It's pretty amusing, and would be even more amusing
if the trailer had not given away all the best jokes. The problem is, the
humour of the material does not combine as well as it should with the filmmaking
style. Jim Jarmusch's "Stranger than Paradise" is famous for getting big
laughs out of similarly long, quiet takes, but in that movie the whole point
was the comic value of boredom and nothingness. Here, the context is all
wrong: The method is absurdist, and so are the characters, and there's nothing
straight to play off.
A few days before seeing "The Man Without a Past",
I wrote a review of "Divine Intervention", and complained that it in large
part felt like "an endurance test for deadpan comedy". Here again I find
myself nonplussed, but although Kaurismaki's film doesn't quite take off,
it doesn't become tiresome either. It rolls out slowly as its central mystery
gets close to being solved, in intriguingly grim settings, striking colour
and random yet enjoyable bits of 1950s American pop. And unlike in "Divine
Intervention", these actors aren't straining for blankness in their faces.
Somehow every dull expression, and equally every quirk, feels
natural.
COPYRIGHT©
2003 Ian Waldron-Mantgani
2003 Reviews
(alphabetical)
2003 Reviews (by star
rating)
Archive of all cinema reviews
(alphabetical)
Review Archive
Index
UK
Critic main page
|
|