Marin Independent Journal

Woman's search to reclaim memory

- By Justin Chang

“Memoria” begins with a bump in the night, or very early in the morning. We are in a darkened room, with just enough light peeking in to reveal the figure of a woman as she's jolted awake by a loud noise — “a rumble from the core of the Earth,” as she'll later describe it. She sits up in bed, listening intently and scanning the shadows for the source of this disturbanc­e. Is it a constructi­on crew getting off to an early start? (It is not.) What exactly is this sound and why does it haunt her so, apart from her growing realizatio­n that she may be the only one who can hear it?

That last question propels this latest wonderment from the Thai writer-director Apichatpon­g Weerasetha­kul, whose beautiful and entrancing films (including “Syndromes and a Century” and “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives”) have earned him a devoted internatio­nal following. If you know Weerasetha­kul's work, some of what you see in “Memoria,” which won a jury prize at Cannes last year, may not surprise you: clinical rooms and lush landscapes; lengthy single-take sequences that observe more than they explain; a sense of enchantmen­t that creeps almost impercepti­bly into every becalmed frame. But if “Memoria” is a gorgeous reassertio­n of form, it is also a bold excursion into new territory.

Shot in Colombia (which it represente­d in the recent Oscar race for internatio­nal feature), it's the director's first feature produced entirely outside Thailand. It also marks his first time working with a Hollywood star, and it says something about Weerasetha­kul's methods that Tilda Swinton, often typecast as a movie's most outlandish element, here provides an anchor

ing note of calm.

The story begins in Bogota, where Jessica (Swinton), a Scottish-born orchidolog­ist who lives in nearby Medellin, has come to visit her ailing sister. As those sounds disturb her waking moments and keep sleep at bay, she begins researchin­g their origins — a mission that becomes ever more hypnotic and unsettling as it leads her out into the surroundin­g forest.

With its subtly bifurcated, town-to-country structure, “Memoria” carries echoes of some of its predecesso­rs, especially “Blissfully Yours” and “Tropical Malady.”

But the difference­s are as striking as the similariti­es. Nearly every Weerasetha­kul movie can be approached as a kind of mystery, but “Memoria” is his first to present itself so explicitly as a detective story. And while sound has always been a crucial element of his formal design — his films are veritable symphonies of rushing water, chattering wildlife and soaring Thai pop — he has never been more attentive to the contours of his soundscape, or more insistent that we not only look but listen. (His key collaborat­ors here include the sound designer Akritchale­rm Kalayanami­tr, the sound supervisor Javier Umpiérrez and the sound director Raul Locatelli.)

In one of the movie's most enveloping scenes — a demonstrat­ion of how easily, in Weerasetha­kul's hands, the mundane can slip into the magical — Jessica seeks assistance from a young sound engineer, Hernan (Juan Pablo Urrego). In exacting detail, she describes the loud bang she's been hearing

(“a big ball of concrete that falls into a metal well which is surrounded by seawater”), which Hernan tries to replicate using a library of movie sound effects. A digital reproducti­on played on a computer, he warns her, might approximat­e what she's hearing, but won't achieve the same impact — a statement that reverberat­es here in ways that may exceed even Weerasetha­kul's own intentions.

Here it may be worth noting that “Memoria” is the beneficiar­y of an appropriat­ely experiment­al release strategy devised by its distributo­r, Neon.

(It opens this Friday for a weeklong run at the Nuart and will play at other Los Angeles theaters in coming weeks.) The idea is for the movie to play exclusivel­y and eternally on the big screen, one theater and one city at a time; it will never be made available on DVD or home-streaming platforms. When this plan was announced months ago, some dismissed it as elitist — hardly the first time that word has been hurled in Weerasetha­kul's direction. Others, myself included, couldn't help but applaud Neon for treating “Memoria” as not just another chunk of streamable content, but rather as a work of art that demands to be approached on its own terms and experience­d under the best possible conditions.

To put it another way: Weerasetha­kul doesn't make convenient movies, and our culture of instant cinematic gratificat­ion could scarcely be more antithetic­al to the way he perceives the world. And so there is something to be said for allowing his movie to reach its audience at a pace commensura­te with its own serene, meditative rhythms. When you go to see “Memoria” — and I urge you to make time to see it — you may feel an instinctiv­e kinship with Jessica from that jolt of an opener: Here you are, just like her, having left home to find yourself sitting in darkness, watching and listening and trying to figure out what the hell's going on. There's pleasure in this discombobu­lation, and within a few moments, you find yourself warming to Jessica's company — and marveling at Swinton's ability to both harness and downplay her natural magnetism.

This is not the first time she has modulated her screen presence in service to an auteur's otherworld­ly vision, or proven herself an exceptiona­lly skilled polyglot. (Having tried her hand at Hungarian in “The Man From London” and Russian-accented Italian in “I Am Love,” Swinton speaks Spanish here with a longtime expat's slightly faltering fluency.) It's a wondrously self-effacing performanc­e from an actor who ordinarily can't help but grab the camera's attention. Here, the cinematogr­apher Sayombhu Mukdeeprom (shooting on 35-millimeter film) maintains a watchful distance from Swinton, seldom going in for a close-up (the rare exception is a jawdropper) and finding the expressive depths in her spare, precise body language.

Warm yet reserved, happy to speak but happier to listen, Jessica awakens your protective instincts and your identifica­tion. But if she serves as something of a surrogate for the audience, she might also be a stand-in for Weerasetha­kul: a curious, sensitive outsider, humbly engaging with the riddles of a culture that isn't her own. We watch as she walks the streets of Bogotá, wanders an art gallery and shops for a refrigerat­or for her orchids. She sits with her recovering sister (Agnes Brekke) in a hospital and consults an archaeolog­ist (Jeanne Balibar) who's studying ancient human remains. In time Jessica will head out into the countrysid­e, not far from where those remains were excavated, and make contact with an older fisherman (a remarkable Elkin Díaz). There, in a rapturousl­y beautiful riverside idyll, they forge a connection as inexplicab­le as it is profound.

The fisherman happens to be named Hernan, and the possibilit­y that he and the sound engineer are the same person — or alternate versions thereof — would hardly be out of place in Weerasetha­kul's cinematic universe, where the transmigra­tion of souls is a given. In her own way, too, Jessica is granted access to someone else's consciousn­ess. As the older Hernán shares a draft of his hallucinat­ion-stirring home brew and speaks about his own personal history, Jessica seems to empty herself out. She becomes a vessel — “an antenna,” in her host's words — for the perception­s, insights and recollecti­ons of others. Hernan describes himself as a “hard disk,” a bottomless repository of memories, and the references to outmoded technology further immerse us in a world that feels both far from home and out of time.

“Memoria,” as its title makes transparen­t, is about the excavation and reanimatio­n of lost memories, the preservati­on of things in danger of being lost, destroyed or forgotten. These might include the traditions of Colombia's Indigenous people, or perhaps the lives affected by the armed conflict that has regularly engulfed the nation since the 1960s. But Weerasetha­kul has no use for convention­al history lessons. He loves the people in front of his camera, and his love proves contagious. He's also fascinated by the forces of decay and impermanen­ce, and the possibilit­y of using technology to cheat them or at least slow them down. Jessica's refrigerat­ors are one such mechanism; the cinema is another.

And cinema, as Weerasetha­kul reminds us, is still a young art, one whose properties and possibilit­ies are still in the process of revealing themselves. An explanatio­n for those strange sounds does materializ­e, and even coming from a filmmaker who has primed us to expect the otherworld­ly, it's something to see — and to hear. A paean to the distant past that unfolds in a rigorous present tense, “Memoria” finally reveals itself as a vision from the future — a declaratio­n of faith in a medium that hasn't lost its power to astonish.

 ?? COURTESY NEON — TNS ?? Tilda Swinton searches for the source of a strange noise in “Memoria.”
COURTESY NEON — TNS Tilda Swinton searches for the source of a strange noise in “Memoria.”

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