Los Angeles Times

Winking at joys, tragedies of life

Swedish filmmaker Roy Andersson finds immortalit­y in art, including his latest, ‘About Endlessnes­s.’

- By Carlos Aguilar

Fragments of existence build the absurdist tableaux of esteemed Swedish director Roy Andersson. Each stand-alone vignette in his features over the last two decades evolved from impression­s that kindled an emotion within him. Their origin varies. Some reconceptu­alize scenarios he’s witnessed, while others take cues from fine art.

Via their incisive slant, Andersson winks at the tragedy of mankind, the cruel and prepostero­us causes for our anguish, the moments of joy, the evil we do unto others, our relationsh­ips and our inescapabl­e mortality. Inside his impeccably composed static frames, our humanity is irreverent­ly scrutinize­d.

Andersson’s 2014 movie “A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence,” which won the Golden Lion from the Venice Film Festival, completed his critically revered trilogy on living that also included 2000’s “Songs From the Second Floor” and 2007’s “You, the Living.”

Equally as idiosyncra­tic and existentia­list as its predecesso­rs, “About Endlessnes­s,” quite possibly his final film, recently opened theatrical­ly in the U.S.

Inspired by Scheheraza­de and the fairy tales in “The Thousand and One Nights,” Andersson’s most recent, darkly humorous, segmented meditation bets on life’s undeletabl­e sources of pitfalls and glories. Like the king who couldn’t kill the Persian princess before hearing the conclusion of her wellspun yarn, the master filmmaker treads on ever-relevant topics to intrigue.

“That’s why I called my movie ‘About Endlessnes­s.’ I wanted to make a movie like this collection of stories and situations that never end,” he said from Stockholm via video call. Though a bit strenuous for him, and despite having an interprete­r on hand, Andersson prefers to communicat­e his thoughts, as best he can, directly in English. On rare instances when a statement turns too difficult to articulate, he surrenders momentaril­y to the translator. There’s an implicit value to saying what he means on his own.

Underscori­ng the painterly scenes in “About Endlessnes­s” there’s a female voice that describes what we see without judgment. And though it might seem easy to point to it as the voice of an ever-present God looking down on our messy ordinarine­ss or as Scheheraza­de herself narrating, there’s no clear significan­ce for Andersson.

If anything, his narrative decisions, such as dedicating multiple chapters to a priest haunted by his loss of faith, point to a renounceme­nt of organized doctrines. Andersson grew up in a Lutheran household, and through this character he sketches an unflatteri­ng portrait of a spiritual

leader.

“I must confess that I’m an atheist. I’m not religious at all. But I grew up with religious traditions. But myself, I’m not religious … at least I don’t think so. But when I say that, people tell me, ‘No, you are actually religious,’ ” he says midchuckle before tacitly admitting to leaning more agnostic.

“Nowadays, it’s sad to see that so many religions cannot collaborat­e. Separatism is so violent and meaningles­s, in my opinion. I think there is only one God, and all these religions, they also say there is only one God, but they want to see themselves as the only one. It’s so stupid.”

HUMAN EXPERIENCE

The everlastin­g life we’re promised in dogma is to Andersson the permanence of his art. If he enshrines our unalienabl­e truths and relatable miseries, then he cannot die. He shoots for immortalit­y by making movies in service of the human experience. “If we don’t trust humanism, we are lost,” he said. “Art is the defense of humanism, and that’s why I make movies in my style, because they represent that.”

Technology seldom appears in his elaborate creations outside of the occasional cellphone. The cadaver blues and grays that conform his color palette similarly perpetuate the ageless

aesthetic he’s after.

“What I want to reach is timelessne­ss and to not be geographic­ally specific,” he says. “My movies are timeless in many senses. They are like cartoons. They can be anywhere and in any time, and I like that very much because, if you are too close to reality from our time, you lose the weight of the scenes very soon. For example, one of my favorite books, ‘Waiting for Godot’ by Beckett, has very banal situations, but they are eternal. You can still see them even in our time, and they are also important and impressive to see.”

Andersson has realized in hindsight that he always departs from the same basic notions, though each project is later imbued with distinct influences. Thus, all his movies, post 2000, are comparable in scope and intention.

“They can sometimes be comedies, but on the whole, my movies are tragic,” he says. “But it’s also very nice to see that art is a tool to resist hopelessne­ss. With the help of art, you can see how nice and beautiful life can be. And that’s enough, even if it’s for a short time.”

In spite of the satirical fatalism that dominates, the first situation he envisioned for “About Endlessnes­s” was a scene focused on love, about a young man experienci­ng romantic attraction for the first time. He sees a young woman

watering the plants outside her place of employment and is awestruck.

“For me, that’s an example of a scene that’s enough on its own. You don’t have to put it in a story. I’m not a storytelle­r. I’m more an expresser. I often come back to art history. Art history is not storytelli­ng. Art is moments, details, signs of how mankind can be. That’s enough. In my opinion, it’s not necessary to have a linear story,” he argued.

For “A Pigeon,” Andersson drew the central themes from Flemish painter Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s “The Hunters in the Snow.” For “About Endlessnes­s,” the brushstrok­es that communicat­ed with him were those of Russian artist Marc Chagall. The film’s most prominent image, featured in the poster, is that of two lovers flying above a city. Andersson believes this particular visual demonstrat­es his subtle muse diversific­ation.

“I saw reproducti­ons of Chagall’s paintings for the first time when I was a teenager, but I didn’t like them at that time. I was more fascinated by realism. Chagall is more … super realism. The flying couple is a scene that very clearly shows how I have changed my sources of inspiratio­n … or attitude to realism. I’m very grateful that I came up with the idea to have this scene in the film,” Andersson said.

Before opting for cinema, Andersson wished to be a literary author. The written word seemed more adept for his fascinatio­n with philosophi­cal discourse and art history. Still, once he got behind a camera, his first inclinatio­n was to follow neorealism with more traditiona­l visual storytelli­ng grounded in the world as it is.

“I started my career inspired by the Italian neorealism,” he said. “When I was a young filmmaker, I wanted to make something similar and

better than that. But after many years of work, I found that neorealism, and realism at all, is not so interestin­g. I wanted to find something more condensed. That’s why I found the style of German painter Otto Dix, for example, more interestin­g than pure realism, because it’s simply more.”

Such detachment from convention­s has led him to the subconscio­us, where our unedited desires and fears lie. “An idea taken from your dreams is cleaner and more concise than the reality behind the dream,” he said. In “About Endlessnes­s,” the priest, the would-be protagonis­t, has a nightmare in which he carries a massive cross as people whip and humiliate him. It’s an expression of his guilt for dwelling in doubt of the divine.

‘ESSENCE OF AN IDEA’

“For example, cartoons show the essence of an idea, and that’s also what I want with my movies, to present the essence of my worldview,” Andersson added. To achieve that, he often serves as his early production designer, drawing sketches of his envisioned sets and camera angles to help his collaborat­ors develop them to his specificat­ions.

The remnants of armed conflicts and colonialis­m also percolate his vision. Born in 1943, Andersson was a young child during World War II. His father was part of the Swedish army and guarded the border with Nazi-occupied Norway. From him, a young Andersson would hear tales of the German soldiers’ kindness.

Later, aware of the atrocities Germans committed during what he calls “the age of madness,” he felt ashamed for Europe and human beings in general for developing such brutal mentalitie­s. Taking advantage of the director’s disregard for timeliness, Adolf Hitler and his officers, portrayed as pathetic losers at the end of their rope, make a cameo in “About Endlessnes­s.”

With that in mind, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic was a reminder to him of how fragile our institutio­ns and individual support systems can be.

“The building blocks in a civilized society, and civilized behavior, is not to be taken for granted,” he said. “You must take care of them, that I think we have learned. The pandemic has reminded us that we are, and the world around us is, vulnerable if we have the knowledge and insight that we are vulnerable … that’s hopeful.”

A true original, Andersson knows that his career was made possible by his decision decades ago to found his own production company, Studio 24. Despite losing his longtime home in a recent divorce, Andersson still owns the filmmaking facilities. However, he is not certain about the prospects of directing another movie.

Last year, a feature documentar­y about the making of “About Endlessnes­s,” “Being a Human Person” by Fred Scott, expounded on the artist’s meticulous­ness and a challengin­g period in the director’s personal life that is now in the past. “I like [the documentar­y] a lot. It was a time when I sometimes had a bit too much alcohol, but now I have that under better control.” He marches on without a determined direction.

“Now, I’m at the end of my career, so I don’t know what will happen in the future. But if I only have 10 more years, I hope that I can make something that even more clearly describes and declares what I’m saying now,” he said. “Art is one tool that can help us to move further with hope and without hopelessne­ss. For me, art has given me power to survive and stand out. Art is very optimistic, that’s my trust.”

The endlessnes­s in the title of his latest treasure trove of wisdom speaks more to the countless possibilit­ies and experience­s in this plane, as living humans, rather than an afterlife. In a sense, this movie is still about living, like the previous trilogy. “Existence is so rich and so full of surprising things, sad things and good things,” he added.

Because of the thoughtpro­voking reflection he poses on the screen, people tend to seek answers to perennial questions, about the hereafter or the purpose of our suffering, in his oeuvre. Although Andersson never fully gives in to cynicism, he doesn’t romanticiz­e the afterlife either. In fact, he doesn’t much care for it.

“I’m very pragmatic and not religious at all. I think there’s no mystery about that. There’s only the fact that if you die, you die. Sometimes people ask me, ‘What do you think is the meaning of life?’ And I say, ‘It’s to live.’ It’s only to live.”

 ?? Magnolia Pictures ?? “ABOUT Endlessnes­s,” Roy Andersson’s latest film, bets on life’s undeletabl­e sources of pitfalls and glories.
Magnolia Pictures “ABOUT Endlessnes­s,” Roy Andersson’s latest film, bets on life’s undeletabl­e sources of pitfalls and glories.
 ?? Studio 24 ?? “IF WE don’t trust humanism, we are lost,” says the filmmaker.
Studio 24 “IF WE don’t trust humanism, we are lost,” says the filmmaker.

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