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Spotlight: Scottish Documentaries – Maja Borg on Future My Love

08.10.2012 by Nicola //

Future My Love is the debut feature from Swedish filmmaker and Edinburgh College of Art graduate Maja Borg.
The film is described as an “experimental documentary”. On the surface, it is comprised of two intertwining stories: a unique love story which challenges our collective and personal utopias in search of freedom, and the story of 95 year-old futurist Jacques Fresco’s Venus Project, which revolves around ideas of a new social model. Maja pitched the film here at EIFF in 2007 and it has been produced by the Scottish Documentary Institute.
Future My Love takes on similar themes to Borg’s earlier short, Ottica Zero (2007), taking us on a poetic road trip that explores our dysfunctional relationship with the society in which we live. Jacques Fresco proposes a social model that provides total equality, providing people make their contributions. The model he suggests is based on the integration of the best of science and technology into a comprehensive plan for a new society based on human and environmental concern.
Fresco’s ideas, which he has been working on for 70 years, still sound radical many decades after they were part of the public discourse. “Jacques is not the easiest character to get under the skin of,” says Borg, “I spent a few months there in total so I’ve had a lot of conversations with this man. But it wasn’t until I was there the third time when we could actually start to have discussions. I don’t think that was because he wasn’t interested… but to actually understand what he says you have to do a lot of research. So I went home and did my homework then came back and then we had very, very interesting discussions.”
So what attracted her to this man and his seemingly outdated mode of thinking? “I think what attracted me to Jacques is that he speaks about things we have in common and things you have to do yourself, and the importance of not creating a wee clique that’s going to do its thing. However long that it is going to take, it has to be a constant dialogue, globally. That’s what he has been doing, he’s been finding information and trying to package it in a way so he can pass it on.”
Along with Jacques’ speeches on societal change – in which he guarantees society can be overturned within 10 years – there are some opposing voices. One truck driver whom Borg records as he gives her a lift acknowledges the problems with our current economy, but shies away from her questions about change due to general busyness. I asked Maja if this is something that came up a lot.
“Oh yeah, totally. And myself as well! We are so busy living our lives that it’s not like we’re necessarily going to care about change until it hurts us personally. When things hurt us personally, the reasons why they hurt us may be a whole chain of questions, and we often go directly to the first one. The truck driver was someone who is not morally agreeing with the system, but completely living it and benefitting from it.”
Being hurt by, and having to negotiate within, a system which has been in place long before ourselves is another theme of the film. By writing a love letter to the idealistic love of her life and illustrating it with Super 8 footage, Borg brings us to the personal side of this constant negotiation.
“If I look at it as a relationship I get so many ways in to then understand it and also understand the difficulties of it and the mechanisms of staying in an abusive relationship. I do think they very much apply because they are structures that we ultimately have to make it easier for ourselves. But they can be abused or we can forget to update them, so what was a secure relationship for a peasant society is not necessarily what’s going to be the most functional or have the most opportunities today.
“I very much hope that people feel that it’s an invitation and not, like, this is me so I don’t care what you think. That would be terrible.”
Placing a personal story shot on Super 8 amidst a documentary may sound like chalk and cheese, but this visceral exploration of heavy themes makes the personal universal, and vice-versa. “It’s scary to shoot on Super 8. It’s one of the reasons why I chose it. When you are trying to talk about things that are much more searching, you need things to respond to, so it’s actually an advantage not to have complete control over the medium you work with.
“I think in every good film you have the sense that this is going beyond language a little bit. For me that’s what art is all about, to expand language.”
Future My Love screened at Edinburgh International Film Festival 2012. Read more about it at http://www.futuremylove.com/

Categories // Film

Review: Brave

08.08.2012 by Nicola //

Pixar takes a turn to fairytale-telling, princess protagonist-leading animation with Brave. Set in the Scottish Highlands, fiery-headed Merida (Kelly MacDonald) is a leading lady with a twist. When the young princes of surrounding clans are charged with fighting for the lassie’s hand, she defies tradition and chooses to fight for her own.
Brave teems with Scottish greats, from the cast (which includes Billy Connolly and Robbie Coltrane) to the colourful yet wonky language. Big daddy Fergus (Connolly) is gruff yet gentle, a somewhat distant figure in terms of Merida’s emotional upbringing, allowing for mother Helena (Emma Thompson) to battle out an utterly honest mother-daughter relationship, the likes of which is seldom seen on screen.
What isn’t new is Pixar’s trademark visuals: wisping willows and surprising transformations are complemented by a trio of terrible triplets leading the chase, marking this one of the studio’s best for beauty and rambunctious action. As always, the animation and heart-filled message is, one hopes, changing the destiny of the princess fable in contemporary cinema.

Categories // Film

DVD Review: Young Adult

06.18.2012 by Nicola //

Screenwriter Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman reunite after the coming-of-age blitz of Juno. Charlize Theron joins them on this new project as their protagonist, a caustic 30-something in her own form of arrested development, Mavis Gary.

The ghost-writer of a teen, or YA, book series (“YA, that’s industry speak for Young Adult”), Mavis has moved on from life in small-town Minnesota to the “Mini Apple” – though nobody calls it that anymore – Minneapolis. Once prom queen and the girl they all wanted to be, Mavis’ life has dissolved into an endless series of binges – of both the drink and reality TV varieties. Her way of life, though deplorable in the white bread middle America sense, is oddly alluring – though understandable as it’s far less oddly so to her former neighbours.
Upon receiving a new baby e-card from her high school sweetheart, she decides to return home to rekindle the romance of her life. And her scheme is as whacked as it sounds.
Almost immediately, Mavis finds herself in the company of former classmate Matt (Patton Oswalt), whom she barely remembers, save for the fact that his leg was shattered by some jocks who thought he was gay in high school. Lumbering around this small town, this poor, big-hearted creature lends a dose of pathos to proceedings as Oswalt breaks out his best loveable loser moves in his attempts to guide this larger-than-life, beautiful lunatic to her senses. If Eternal Sunshine’s Clementine was a fucked up girl looking for a state of mind, Mavis is a fucked up girl who doesn’t realise that her state of mind is equally fucked.
As Mavis’ scheme ticks inexorably towards its doomed conclusion, there’s plenty to love about Cody’s matured, pared-down writing. Though the script loses its way towards the climax, some missteps and mishandlings of the key point of drama are not enough to spoil this fairly extraordinary Hollywood narrative. 
Everything that is wrong about this film’s script feels, however uncomfortably, right. Young Adult bravely goes where most narratives won’t, forgoing the kinds of closure and resolve that film watchers crave – and for its crimes, is all the better.
Young Adult is available on DVD in the UK from 25 June.

Categories // Film

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