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The Tulse Luper Suitcases, Part 2: Vaux to the Sea

Netherlands, Spain, Luxembourg, Italy, Hungary, United Kingdom

2004

108 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Peter Greenaway

EXEC Carlo Dusi

SCR Peter Greenaway

DP Reinier van Brummelen

CAST JJ Feild, Roger Rees, Isabella Rossellini, Raymond J. Barry, Valentina Cervi, Marcel Iureş, Steven Mackintosh, Franka Potente, Ana Torrent, Jordi Mollà, Ornella Muti, Maria Schrader, Scot Williams, Francesco Salvi, Anna Galiena, Gaspard Ulliel, Kerman Malicki-Sánchez, Andrea Bruschi

ED Elmer Leupen, Jaap Praamstra

PROD DES Pirra Jesús Lorenzo

MUSIC Architorti, Borut Krzisnik, Eduardo Polonio

Berlinale (Berlinale Special), Tribeca

Synopsis

The eponymous suitcases (of which there are 92) contain the collected memories of Tulse Luper, a manic collector of forgotten records and other evidence of the twentieth century. Devised as a trilogy, Peter Greenaway’s multimedia project concentrates on a period between 1928, the year in which the element uranium was discovered in Colorado, and 1989, the year when the Berlin wall came down and the Cold War came to an end. The two central events of the past one hundred years – the confrontation between East and West and the threat of atomic warfare – have left their mark on writer and devisor of projects Tulse Luper, who spends most of his time detained in some form of prison or another. Luper’s role is hard to define: his many encounters, the injuries he has sustained and fragments of sentences that surface from his memory, all combine to produce a complex weave or structure that includes both various periods in time as well as the conditions of production and the filming of the media project itself. The 92 suitcases are fixed points within this collage; in both the film and the website that accompanies the project (http://www.tulselupernetwork.com) they refer to a level of information behind the events portrayed. The second part of the film begins with the Second World War, during which Tulse Luper is being held in a country house, and the section ends in the middle of the Cold War. Besides the project’s internet presence, the trilogy is also to be found on DVD and CD Rom, in book form and as an exhibition. –Berlinale

Director

Original

Peter Greenaway

An avant-gardist who earned surprising access to the mainstream, Peter Greenaway is among the most ambitious and controversial filmmakers of his era. Trained as a painter and heavily influenced by theories of structural linguistics, ethnography, and philosophy, Greenaway’s films traversed often unprecedented ground, consistently exploring the boundaries of the medium by rejecting formal narrative structures in favor of awe-striking imagery, shifting meanings, and mercurial emotional tension; fascinated by formal symmetries and parallels, his material displayed an almost obsessive interest in list-making and cataloguing, earning equal notoriety for its provocative eroticism as well as its almost self-conscious pretentiousness. Born April 5, 1942, in Newport, Wales, Greenaway was raised primarily in nearby Chingford. After deciding at the age of 12 to become a painter, he entered the Walthamstow College of Art. By 1965, Greenaway had begun working as a film editor for the Central Office… read more

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