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AUTONOMOUS SPACES:
Though funded by the state, filmmakers in Syria continue to find
ways to make their often critical voices heard
Written by Cécile Boëx
May/June 2006
http://www.filmlinc.com/fcm/mj06/syria.htm
Neglected-ignored even-Syrian cinema
merits special attention for its originality, quality, and boldness.
That said, compared to the high volume of film production in Egypt,
the film industry's output is minuscule: since 1928, when the first
Syrian film was made, the country has produced only about 150 features.
Syrian cinema began to hit its stride in the Sixties with the success
of a series of Egyptian-style light comedies mixing burlesque, romanticism,
and song-and-dance. And while the Seventies marked the golden age
of Syrian commercial filmmaking, a different mode of production
began to emerge when the state became involved in 1964 with the
establishment of the National Film Organization. The NFO opened
up a new path for filmmakers by promoting the production of films
free from the demands of profitability. Its objective was to produce
"serious" work that reflected the political and social
progress of the Arab world and, implicitly, transmitted and promoted
the discourse of state power and the Ba'ath Party. The documentaries
of the Seventies strikingly illustrate the mise-en-scène
of the Ba'ath Party's progressive ideology by aestheticizing and
sublimating the great modernizing projects of this period (the construction
of the Euphrates dam, the industrialization of different sectors
of the economy, the development of educational institutions, etc.).
Now that most private production companies have shifted their focus
to the more lucrative TV market, today the NFO is the only institution
in a position to finance filmmaking. It now produces around three
features and roughly 10 shorts annually.
The NFO's utilitarian conception of
cinema didn't always produce the expected results. In the early
Seventies, documentary filmmaker Omar Amiralay was already subverting
the official line by calling attention to those left behind by Syria's
development policies. His Everyday Life in a Syrian Village
(72) portrayed the anger and poor living conditions of the peasant
inhabitants on the banks of the Euphrates who have been adversely
affected by agrarian reform. The film was promptly banned, and it
was six years before Amiralay was permitted to work in Syria again.
When he was given another chance, he made the equally subversive
The Chickens (78), taking another step toward a contentious
auteur cinema. The Chickens records the economic restructuring of
Sadad, a "pilot village" located in the Syrian steppe,
whose inhabitants take up state-subsidized chicken farming. Amiralay
carefully presents the alienating relationship of the chicken farmer
to his work and the inhuman character of intensive economic production.
Using elaborate montage and a wide-angle lens, he draws a parallel
between the chickens and the farmers, filming them in anamorphically
distorted close-ups. At the end of the film they find themselves
on the verge of bankruptcy after a fall in the price of eggs set
by the government, and in the film's final sequence, their words
are completely replaced by clucking. The distorted images of the
farmers and their assimilation by the chickens in a zoomorphic mise-en-scène
suggests Amiralay's antipathy toward his subjects, who have abandoned
agriculture and artisanal work for what is basically a get-rich-quick
scheme. At the same time, he denounces the exploitation of these
farmers by a state system that at the time still claimed to be socialist.
The fiction films produced by the NFO
benefited from a greater autonomy in terms of subject and cinematic
expression. Until the late Seventies, they concentrated on the Palestinian
question, and a number of them gained international recognition
and won festival prizes, notably Men Under the Sun (70),
co-directed by Mohammad Chahine, Marwan Mouazzen, and Nabil el-Maleh,
and Khaled Hamada's The Knife (71), both adapted from novels
by the celebrated Palestinian writer Ghassan Kanafani. During this
period, the NFO was regarded as the home of politically committed
Arab cinema's vanguard, and it played host to a number of renowned
directors, resulting in some of Arab cinema's key films of the period,
including Egyptian filmmaker Tawfeeq Saleh's The Duped
(72), Iraqi director Qais al-Zubaidi's Ali Yazerli (74),
and Kufur Qassem (74), by Lebanon's Burhan Alwaiya.
If narrative filmmaking in the seventies
often conveyed a commitment to the Palestinian cause and a Marxist
conception of society, in the Eighties, the tone changed completely.
The emphasis on collective causes gave way to more personal treatments
of the relation between the individual and Syrian society, heralding
the advent of an auteur cinema that drew upon the filmmakers' own
experiences. Whereas the majority of films from the preceding period
derived their scenarios from Arab literature, directors now began
to write their own screenplays. This "New Wave," as Syrian
critics referred to it, was heavily influenced by the realist approach
taught at the Moscow film institute, VGIK, where many Arab filmmakers
studied. The films that inaugurated this new phase were Nabil el-Maleh's
Vestiges of Pictures (79), Samir Zikra's The Half-Meter
Incident (80), and Mohammad Malas's Dreams of the City
(83).
Dreams of the City recounts
the experiences of an 11-year-old boy in Damascus during the Fifties.
Newly arrived from the small town of Quneytra (the director's hometown
in the Golan Heights region) with his mother and his brothers following
the death of his father, the film's young protagonist excitedly
discovers the capital during a period of political upheaval in which
a number of coups d'états took place. Gradually the boy's
enthusiasm and innocence turn to disenchantment as he discovers
the violence that reigns in the social and political realm. Malas
intends this depiction of an era of ferment, punctuated by exultant,
promise-laden Pan-Arab speeches, to contrast with the sense of stagnation
and collective disillusion that prevailed in the early Eighties,
the time of the film's making.
This new cinematic current coincided
with the increased hardening of the Syrian regime's authoritarian
character following its repression of secular and religious oppositional
movements, which had grown in strength and in some cases become
radicalized in the late Seventies and early Eighties. As a result
the NFO became a privileged space for the articulation of a dissenting
discourse that could no longer express itself openly. Auteur films
conveyed the difficulty individuals faced in asserting their identities
at the margins of institutionalized power, whether it be familial,
religious, or political in form. And in this way, they called into
question premises, modes of identification, and representations
fixed by the perceptual habits and imposed norms of Syrian society.
Without a doubt the most fully achieved
example of this effort to describe individuals' inability to take
control of their social and emotional destiny is Nabil el-Maleh's
The Extras (93). Salem, a sensitive man from a modest background
and a bit-part amateur theater actor, falls in love with Nada. After
months of furtive meetings in public places, they rent an apartment
for the afternoon from a friend. The apartment is the one place
where they can be free from social convention and express their
individuality and desires-but this metaphoric realm is permanently
threatened by external intrusions: street sounds, knocks at the
door, and the almost constant threat of discovery. At the same time
it begins to literally shrink over the course of the film through
the very precise spatial manipulations of el-Maleh's mise-en-scène.
Nevertheless the couple manages to escape these pressures for a
time. Salem legitimates their intimacy, unacceptable to Syrian social
and religious convention, by improvising a marriage ceremony, fashioning
wedding rings from iron wire. He then decides to put on a play for
Nada and uses curtains to cobble together a set. Salem is no longer
a bit-part actor; he's become a director shaping the course of events.
While the couple are giving themselves over entirely to their dreams
and desires, the secret police, who have come to arrest an old,
blind oud player who lives next door, burst in. One of them discovers
Nada hidden in the kitchen, exposing her dishonor in being found
alone with a man. Trying to protect the old musician, Salem is beaten
and humiliated while Nada looks on through the crack in the kitchen
door. As Salem staggers, el-Maleh moves the camera erratically,
causing the image to waver: the private space the couple believed
they had created falls apart, proving to be illusory. Overcome with
shame, Nada leaves the apartment without so much as a glance at
Salem.
The auteur cinema has in turn produced
an offshoot that could be termed cinema in vivo, made up of films
anchored in the daily life of their directors' respective religious
communities. Thus, the majority of the films of Abdullatif Abdul-Hamid
and Oussama Mohammad take place within the Alawite community, those
of Riyad Shayyah and Ghassan Shemeit within the Druze community,
and those of Raymond Boutros within the Christian community. The
critical import of this development is all the more striking in
a country where the authorities have always tried to sublimate Syria's
numerous religious and ethnic differences into a nationalist discourse.
Oussama Mohammad's Stars in Broad Daylight (88) inaugurated
this new current. Mohammad presents a family living in a small village
in the Alawite Mountains, a family dominated by its tyrannical eldest
son, Khalil, who arranges the marriages of his younger brother Kasir
and his sister Sana so as to increase the family's land holdings
and strengthen his position in the community. In the course of the
wedding feast, Kasir's fiancée runs away with another man,
and, wounded by her brother's humiliation, Sana refuses to marry
her fiancé as well. Khalil forces her to marry another older
cousin, who rapes her before the wedding. The film's central character,
Khalil, is a concrete embodiment of power: he decides his siblings'
fate, while the paterfamilias who legitimizes his authority is a
sweet, enfeebled old man. With his dark glasses, worn at all times,
and his job at a wiretapping center in the city, he is depicted
as a caricature of an intelligence-service agent (Syria's secret
police recruits mainly from the Alawite community, the largest religious
minority in Syria, to which the presidents Hafez and Bashar al-Assad
belong). When Kasir arrives in Damascus for the first time to escape
his brother's yoke, shots illustrating his first contact with the
capital are punctuated by street posters of the famous singer who
performed at his unhappy marriage ceremony. Mohammad is unmistakably
mocking the ubiquity of presidential portraits throughout the city,
the seat of political power, and by consistently playing on this
register of humor and absurdity, Stars in Broad Daylight formulates
an indirect critique of arbitrary power.
Mohammad's second feature, Sacrifices
(02), also unfolds in a remote mountain village in the heart of
the Alawite community. It opens with the dying agony of a patriarch
who expires before passing his name down to his descendants. The
story centers on the competition between family members to claim
this name, which confers upon its holder power and authority over
the clan. The memorable opening sequence juxtaposes the dying father
with his two daughters-in-law, who are in the middle of giving birth,
while the villagers cry and chant en masse. Here the spectator is
positioned as a voyeur and plunged into a state of turmoil and anguish
that is accentuated by the recurring use of low light. Mohammad
fragments the bodies of his characters into close-ups of eyes, hands,
faces, and feet, and frequently plays upon the reversed images of
characters reflected in mirrors. But while it's highly polished
in formal terms, Sacrifices is marked by religious and political
symbolism that is inaccessible even to general Syrian audiences.
In this latter regard, Sacrifices
indicates a particular shift in Syrian cinema toward a complex,
metaphorical language-a recurrent recourse to metaphor, the fantastic,
the absurd, the comic, and the use of settings in the distant past.
This phenomenon can be explained by the strengthening of censorship
since the mid-Nineties. The density of symbols and messages is all
the greater since some directors are forced to wait many years before
being able to make a film-intellectual censorship is supplemented
by the material censorship of budgetary constraints and waiting
lists. Nevertheless, Syrian filmmakers have been able to win a certain
degree of creative autonomy, partly by calling on networks of friends
within the NFO administration and the Ministry of Culture, but also
by bypassing censorship, as much at the level of distribution as
cinematic expression. Some filmmakers have been able to send their
films to international festivals before being censored. Inside Syria,
banned films circulate through informal networks within intellectual
circles. In special cases they are also presented at the Damascus
International Film Festival. This selective distribution effectively
traps the filmmakers in a system in which cinematic free expression
is tolerated but restricted and marginalized, and which they are
forced to deal with by the political realities of the day. As well
as being accomplished works of art, the rich and critical films
that result nevertheless bear witness to their time and to the society
that produced them.
Cécile Boëx is currently
preparing a Ph.D. dissertation on the representation of politics
in Syrian cinema at the French Institute in the Near East in Damascus.
© 2006 by Cécile Boëx
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