Wednesday, 27 August 2025

At the MELBOURNE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL - Rod Bishop trawls the program

THE MYSTERIOUS GAZE OF THE FLAMINGO (Diego

Céspedes, Chile, 2025)

L’HOMME À LA VALISE (Chantal Akerman, Belgium,

1983)

MIRRORS No.3 (Christian Petzold, Germany, 2025)

PRIME MINISTER (Lindsay Utz, Michelle Walshe, 2025)

 ********************************

The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo (Matías Catalan, Tamara Cortés)

This year, The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo won the Camera d’Or

at Cannes. A first feature from writer-director Diego Céspedes, it’s a

coming-of-age tale of Lidia (Tamara Cortés), a 12-year-old orphan who

lives among a drag queen community in an isolated, destitute mining

town in Chile’s Acatama Desert.


The transvestites run the local canteen (bar) where miners regularly

congregate to watch them perform. They find Lidia’s ‘mother’

Flamingo (Matías Catalán) particularly charismatic.


It’s 1982 and early days in the AIDS epidemic. Lidia is told there’s a

plague in the town, transmitted through the eyes - or the gazes - of

male and female lovers.


This mix of a misunderstood, deadly gay disease; homophobic miners

who can’t help being attracted to drag queens; and an exuberant,

unapologetic, queer ‘family’ community who dominate and disgust the

town, are the social tensions threatening to explode.


Céspedes (a guest at MIFF) creates a wholly believable world, greatly

aided by the actors, Angello Faccini’s atmospheric cinematography, the

arresting production design, and an impressive musical score from

Florencia Di Concilio.

 

It wobbles at times, unsure of some abrupt transitions from violence to

compassion and family empathy, but it’s an undeniably impressive first

feature. 

 

L’homme à la valise (Jeffrey Kime and Chantel Akerman at a wordless breakfast)

L’Homme à la valise
was part of a Cinémathèque-like collection of 24

shorts and features from Chantel Akerman, and here, the writer-

director-actor returns to the domestic, daily-life-at-home scenario of

Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles, to make

this 61-minute, near wordless, knockabout comedy.


Playing herself, Akerman is trying to write a screenplay, but is

constantly disturbed and interrupted by Henri (Jeffrey Kime), a guest

in her small apartment. It’s Sartre’s “Hell is other people”, whether

she’s barricading herself in her bedroom, or banging senselessly on her

typewriter, or rustling paper to make Henri think she’s working, or

getting up earlier and earlier to avoid him at breakfast. Akerman gets

to channel Charlie Chaplin for an hour, and she does it with the same

effective drollery of the master.

 

Mirrors No.3 (Paula Beer)


Some recent reviews of Christian Petzold’s latest, Mirrors No.3, are

often more confusing than anything that happens in the film.

“Mellifluous”, “mysterious”, “enigmatic” have been used to describe a

film other reviewers consider too thin in plot to survive its 86-minute

length.


It’s true the tonal and abrupt narrative changes of much of Petzold’s

earlier work are muted here, in this story of a woman who survives a

car crash, is then taken in by a lonely woman, only to find herself

replacing her host’s dead daughter. Once again, Paula Beer is icily

charismatic playing the central character, and scarce as Petzold’s plot

may be, his restrained and clear-eyed direction is, as usual, gripping.

 


Prime Minister
is a very serviceable documentary account of Jacinda

Ardern’s time as the New Zealand PM, making excellent use of Clarke

Gayford’s professionally shot home movie footage. This intimacy gives

a fresh view into Ardern’s well-known achievements, and her well-

known struggles, but for this viewer it’s worth the price of admission

to see the New Zealand TV footage of the protests outside Parliament

 demonstrating against her handling of Covid and the economy. Protests

that eventually prompted her resignation. There are very disturbing

similarities with the QAnon nutters who attacked the Capital in the

USA.


Dame Jacinda Ardern has been living in Cambridge, Boston for the past

two years. 

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