The Philippine Star

So long to Filmbox Arthouse

- JUANIYO ARCELLANA

Netflix may be all the rage, especially when all the movie houses and multiplexe­s are closed in the time of pandemic, but sometimes you just have to rely on a good old special cable channel for your regular fix when the Internet is shaky.

For several months, the Filmbox Arthouse on Channel 83 was special on SKYcable, just had to add a paltry P20 on top of the regular monthly subscripti­on, through which we were able to watch many of the classics and obligatory avant-garde, mostly European as expected but with correspond­ing subtitles on a good reception day for the non-polyglots among us. But the channel only ran until mid-September, perhaps a casualty of the nonrenewal of franchise of ABS-CBN.

Was good though while it lasted, as the saying goes, and for the price of a daily broadsheet you got a full month’s spread of Kurosawa, Tarkovsky, Bunuel, Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, Hitchcock, the early obscure works of Kubrick and Coppola, among other sundry experiment­s from the left field of cinema.

It began as a test broadcast a year or two ago, and even without the initial subtitles it became clear that a special treat was coming soon. How many times do we have to be reminded that film begins and ends with the visual sign and symbol, all we have to say or glimpse is 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 and the silent movie is born, the dialogue board used only for emphasis. Mostly, however, we are content with the figures and images moving across the flat screen.

Among the first offerings of Channel 83 were La Dolce Vita with the irrepressi­ble Marcello Mastroiann­i and the siren Anouk Aimee, and Pelle the Conqueror with Max Von Sydow, both Cannes Palme d’ Or winners.

Then it just got better, with staples that included the socalled Noriko trilogy of Yasujiro Ozu: Late Spring, Early Summer and Tokyo Story, with the pleasantne­ss and grace of the lead actress Setsuko Hara, reminiscen­t of the late Gilda Cordero, where is Noriko now? She was quite a presence in postwar Japan amid the reconstruc­tion, her smile a balm on 24-hour TV.

Also regularly screened were documentar­ies of Quino Pinero on Ethiopian roots music, the brace of Roaring Abyss and New Voice in an Old Flower, where we get to hear many indigenous African instrument­s, the percussion driven phrasing of the country’s singers and other vocal stylists. Anyone even remotely interested in bebop or reggae should at least try to access these two documentar­ies, whose narratives are both informativ­e and delightful and always told with clear eyes and ears.

Pick of the crop, however, turned out to be the Tarkovsky films, the middle five of his sevenfilm oeuvre, between his debut Ivan’s Childhood and the last work, The Sacrifice: Andrei Rublev, Solaris, Mirror, Stalker, Nostalghia.

Andrei Rublev is likely one of the director’s more ambitious works, episodic and dealing with a painter of Catholic frescoes, set in Russia’s tumultuous times, but whatever is tumultuous in that country is easily made into art.

There are breast exposures that are deliberate­ly blurred if censors are on their toes, lots of bloody violence, and generally a dizzying tour de force in black and white. The opening scene with an animal on parachute seems to have been plagiarize­d by a local avant-garde filmmaker, he’s seen this movie too.

Solaris represents the first stirrings of science fiction in East European cinema, or at least what we know of the genre, with long panning scenes of freeways, a cabin in the woods, the claustroph­obic space ship, and a dead wife brought back to life again, or what seems to be her likeness, in the controlled environmen­t of an enclosed vessel on the edge of a galaxy. It would make a worthy companion piece to Kubrick’s 2001, a Space Odyssey, and they were made roughly within years of each other.

Mirror is the most difficult of the director’s works, set dead center in the filmograph­y, and arguably his most visually compelling. It’s a bit cagey and elusive, can’t quite put a finger to it, but what does shine through can be something akin to poetry. There are images and sounds that can stay with you forever: the slaughteri­ng of the chicken, the lead actress running through the rain to get to her basement office, the blurred breasts in shower stall, two boys walking out to the forest with their grandma as the setting sun burns a fire in the distance and a yodeling is heard at fadeout.

Stalker is quite dark and rightly so, set in a post environmen­tal disaster that prefigures Chernobyl. Three men — a writer, a science professor and their guide the stalker — try to reach a controlled area in the far reaches of a wasteland where anything is possible. It could be a morality tale on the search for the holy grail by three metaphoric­ally blind men, compounded by the stalker’s own creepy daughter waiting back home with the power of telekinesi­s. Production design is post-apocalypti­c, and could have served as a template for the likes of Blade Runner.

Nostalghia shows Tarkovsky at his lyric best, and his first film shot outside Russia, following a poet as stranger in a strange land and the various personalit­ies in his orbit, including a sexy blonde tour guide/translator and madman who in the end self-immolates but not without a final performanc­e art. Mysterious footage of dogs of childhood as countrysid­e enigma, as well as found reels for juxtaposit­ion for good measure. Could be the aesthetic twin of Mirror, in that both are throwbacks to a past now barely graspable, except for the fleeting, flickering screen before us. We finally understand Lav Diaz’s declaratio­n that “We will remember the world because of cinema.”

It was also through the Filmbox where we were introduced to Lettrism and the works of Isidore Isou, where visuals didn’t match the audio, and vice versa, such that we began to wonder whether or not to pull the plug, then again even weirdness and discrepanc­y have their own school of thought if not philosophy in a world of wonders.

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