The Critic

Belfast boy

- Christophe­r Silvester on Cinema

● KENNETH BRANAGH’S semi-autobiogra­phical Belfast, which he wrote and directed, is set in 1969 in the city of his birth. Nine-year-old Buddy is a Protestant boy living in a mixed street alongside Catholics. He has trouble reconcilin­g the hellfire and damnation preached by his own community’s priest with Catholic notions of confession and absolution.

Buddy loves his maternal grandparen­ts, Granny and Pop (Best Supporting Oscar nomination­s for Judi Dench and Ciarán Hinds), and he adores the cinema. There are clips from two Westerns, Fred Zinneman’s High Noon and John Ford’s The Man Who Shot Liberty

Valance, that resonate with Buddy when he witnesses showdowns between Catholics and Protestant­s, and that will have elicited a warm glow from cinephiles.

There are moments of emotional bonding when Buddy’s family go out to see

One Million Years B.C. (starring Raquel Welch as a “California­n” cavewoman) and

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Branagh allows the vivid colours of these film clips to invade the black and white canvas of his personal story — like Buddy’s family, Branagh’s family moved away from the growing violence of Belfast to English suburbia, in his case to the Thames Valley town of Reading.

Out in cinemas shortly before the Branagh-directed remake of Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile in which he

does an over-egged and over-moustachio­ed Poirot for a second time, Belfast is written with emotional depth and humour, and directed with joyful self-assurance and well-judged shot selections.

Belfast is second favourite to win Best Picture (behind The Power of the Dog) and Branagh is second favourite to win Best Director (after Jane Campion) and Best Original Screenplay (after Licorice Pizza).

My hunch is that Belfast’s feelgood factor will ultimately win out over The Power of the

Dog’s nihilism with the Academy members in the Best Picture category, though Campion will probably win Best Director.

FROM FELLINI’S Amarcord and Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streets, to the Terence Davies films Distant Voices, Still Lives and The Long Day Closes, the semi-autobiogra­phical urge has long proved a rich resource for filmmakers. Francois Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, was 60 years old last year.

Whilst never an Oscar contender, Joanna Hogg’s semi-autobiogra­phical The Souvenir Part II, out in cinemas last month, is avowedly an arthouse movie about the making of an arthouse movie.

In The Souvenir, Hogg’s 2019 film, Honor Swinton Byrne plays Julie, a film student who lives in a modern flat in Knightsbri­dge, and is dating Anthony, a young Foreign Office civil servant, possibly even a spy. He is intellectu­ally self-confident, with seemingly mature opinions, but also a bombastic dandy, ex-army and almost certainly Oxbridge, but from a Geordie parental background.

His dark secret is his heroin habit. Julie, who is from a middle-class, countrysid­e background, is beginning to discover her sexuality and attempting to find her voice as an artist when Anthony, having grown to depend on handouts Julie receives from her parents, at first has a heroin crisis and later dies of an overdose.

IN PART II, JULIE is seeking to come to terms with his death and to make her final-year student film. We get to know two characters from the first film rather better; her fellow film student, Garance, played by Ariane Labed, and another film student, the waspish Patrick, played by Richard Ayoade, who delivers some of the film’s funniest lines.

Joanna Hogg is a graduate of the National Film and Television School, and Julie’s film school teachers are somewhat Corbynish in appearance but also doubtful about whether she has the inner drive and insight to become an authentic filmmaker. Her student film about the mysterious Anthony, when finished, is pretentiou­s beyond belief and yet has flashes of brilliance.

WHEREAS OTHER DIRECTORS seek to convey a sense of period with elaborate scenes backed by lavish budgets, Hogg uses subtle art direction, musical quotes from Eighties and Nineties pop, and a shooting style that precludes busy urban streets — always the most difficult aspect of period to recreate. A loud bang heard from her flat and radio news bulletins in the first movie remind us that the story is set in a time when the IRA was still planting bombs in London. Her preference for static compositio­ns and long takes, and for occasional­ly rambling conversati­ons, is reminiscen­t of French New Wave director Eric Rohmer.

And whereas Branagh portrays the warm-hearted intimacy of Buddy’s family, Hogg captures the more brittle, relationsh­ip of only child Julie with her parents who reside in a rural shire. Are they leading lives of quiet desperatio­n or are they fundamenta­lly at ease with themselves yet nonethless concerned about the situation of their London-dwelling daughter?

Hogg resists the temptation to offer an obvious explanatio­n, but treats them with dignity. One wonders how close her real parents are to their depiction here, just as one wonders how close Branagh’s parents are to Buddy’s.

Despite the imprimatur of Martin Scorsese as an executive producer on both

The Souvenir and The Souvenir Part II, it remains to be seen whether Hogg, like him, will be able to break out from the comforting embrace of semi-autobiogra­phy and whether she can make her camera move a little from time to time. C

 ?? ?? Director Kenneth Branagh on the set of Belfast
Director Kenneth Branagh on the set of Belfast
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 ?? ?? Souvenir Part II sees Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne) bereaved
Souvenir Part II sees Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne) bereaved

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