After the revolution: James Quandt on 12:08 East of Bucharest.
Quandt, James
HAILING FROM the land of Urmuz and Ionesco, Corneliu Porumboiu, the
director of 12:08 East of Bucharest, boasts that "we Romanians
have, in a way, invented absurdity ... or least we've made an art
of it." The tone of Porumboiu's wry little satire, which won
the Camera d'Or for best first film at last year's Cannes Film
Festival, shares enough with compatriot Cristi Puiu's
quasi-absurdist masterpiece of 2005, The Death of Mr.
Lazarescu--world-weary humanism, dark humor, stylized verism, the
unassuming capaciousness of a down-home comedie humaine--that the two
directors have been enlisted as the twin standard-bearers for what
critics have christened the Romanian New Wave. Though Puiu dismisses the
purported movement as nothing more than a clutch of "desperate
directors," Bucharest and Lazarescu together prove that
Romania's may be the only instance of an Eastern European cinema
that benefited from the fall of Communism.
Porumboiu has provocatively declared realist cinema "a pious
wish ... impossible to make," and, like Puiu, he counteracts the
naturalism of his narrative with a style verging on the formalist.
Inspired, he says, by Jim Jarmusch's Down by Law (1986), and
similarly favoring locked shots and extended takes, Porumboiu spends the
first half of his film crosscutting between three characters: Manescu
(Ion Sapdaru), a hangdog history teacher destined to join Mr. Lazarescu
in alcoholic ravage; Piscoci (Mircea Andreescu), an irritable old man
who rails against drunks, firecrackers, and life; and Jderescu (Teodor
Corban), a small-time television-talk-show host who conscripts the other
two to appear on his program marking the sixteenth anniversary of the
anti-Ceausescu revolution. A motif of money runs through all three
segments--as in Mikio Naruse's films, sums, salaries, loans,
prices, debts, and bribes are repeatedly invoked--and they also share a
tone of peevish domesticity, which seems a hallmark of the new Romanian
cinema.
At once temporally precise and geographically vague, the
film's English title--the Romanian original, A fost sau n-a fost?,
means "Happened or not?"--refers to the time on December 22,
1989, when Ceausescu fell. "12:08" therefore marks the moment
Jderescu uses in his televised discussion to determine whether or not a
revolution took place in this village "east of
Bucharest"--that is, did anyone here take to the streets against
Ceausescu before he fled?--and also emphasizes the importance of
temporality in the film: the sixteen years that have passed since the
revolution; the half hour or so of the television show in which a world
is revealed and unraveled; the passage of one day, morning to evening,
whose diurnal span Porumboiu accentuates by framing his story with a
montage of Christmas lights and streetlamps guttering out at the
beginning of the film and flaring once more into life at the end. (Again
like Puiu in Lazarescu, he observes a version of the Aristotelian
unities, shooting the film's last half, the television program, in
apparent real time and in a single, delimited setting.)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The television inquiry quickly turns into an inquisition, as caller
after caller refutes Manescu's claim that he and three other
teachers, two of them now dead, rallied against Ceausescu before 12:08
on the fateful day and were attacked by the Securitate. One woman claims
that the teachers instead spent their time in a corner bar, inebriated bystanders to history. Another caller, whom Manescu named on air as one
of the secret police who beat them, threatens a libel suit; he was only
an accountant for the Securitate, he insists, a perfectly
"respectable" vocation. Called a drunk, a liar, a slanderer,
Manescu explodes against his interrogators and then retreats into
humiliated resignation, noisily shredding paper into an open mic, as the
question of whose account is true ebbs into the unanswerable. That one
wants to believe Manescu, though alcohol has clearly eaten away at his
memory--he can't even recall the events of the previous evening, so
how can he recollect an event that occurred sixteen years ago?--suggests
how generous Porumboiu's comedy of fallibility is. Even as the
director skewers pomposity, self-delusion, and casual
corruption--Manescu chides his students for their inability to cheat--he
maintains an objective tenderness toward many of his characters,
including the tetchy, vain Piscoci, who touchingly recounts the fight he
had with his since-deceased wife on the morning of the revolution.
Porumboiu has a Tati-like eye for discomfort and
incongruity--Piscoci fluttering in his outsize Santa robe or
distractedly making paper boats on camera--and to intensify his dark wit
he employs formal gambits, such as the transition from the rigorous
fixed shooting of the film's first half to the clumsy television
work of the second, brilliantly demarcated by a long, traveling follow
shot. Porumboiu gently mocks himself in the young TV cameraman, a
would-be stylist who wants to use handheld camera but, refused by
Jderescu, compensates with a series of erratic zooms, shaky focus pulls,
and inept reframings. The director is capable of subtle
symmetries--Manescu walking from frame left with his abject Christmas
tree as a boy traverses from frame right with a broken clarinet--and his
palette (ashen streets, monochrome apartments, the red-accented shop of
the Chinese man whom Manescu insults as "yellow inside") is
almost as telling as Puiu's. So, too, is his mastery of tone: The
deadpan way in which Porumboiu depicts the hapless as they attempt to
restitute history never succumbs to derisive irony. When, near the end,
a woman calls to say that her son was killed the day after the
revolution and to wish everyone a Merry Christmas, the film's
melancholic undertow suddenly wells into something like sorrow.
12:08 East of Bucharest opens June 6 at Film Forum in New York.
JAMES QUANDT IS SENIOR PROGRAMMER AT CINEMATHEQUE ONTARIO IN
TORONTO.