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Vertigo of the Blank Page

Vertige de la page blanche

Belgium

2003

81 Min
Color
French
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DIR Raúl Ruiz

PROD Marie-Luce Bonfanti, Vincent Patigny

SCR Raúl Ruiz

DP Nicolas Guicheteau

CAST Patrick Azam, Philippe Bombled, Sophie Bourdon

ED Yannick Leroy

Synopsis

A festival jury debates the merits of a film-within-the-film entitled “Justice.” “Justice,” it seems, concerns a jury debating the fate of three people who imprisoned and interrogated a judge: The judge, earlier on, had imprisoned and interrogated them.

Perversely inspired by the idea of doing a “reality show,” Ruiz invests his various improbable groupings of characters with increasingly oddball versions of realism. Thus at the innermost center of these spiraling fictions, the story of the judge’s abduction is treated as a theatrically distanced political treatise, with straightforward flashbacks and scripted confrontations.

On the next layer up, jury members deliberating the case of the judge and his abductors assert their “social realism” by a recitation of their own names, ages and guilty pleasures.

Finally, on the outermost level, the festival jury glitters with psycho-intellectual artificiality, its panelists constantly sniping at each other but bound by a tradition of quasi-incestuous in-breeding. They tend to see everything as a version of something else, comparing the juries of “Justice” and “12 Angry Men” and hotly contesting charges of plagiarism.

To further complicate the issue, actors in the cast of “Justice” hover on the fringes of the deliberating film jury, trying to figure out if they’re up for any prizes.

But all this becomes irrelevant in pic’s final act, when the meaning of the smoking suitcases falling out the sky points to the ultimate reality, death, which cancels out all others and regroups the actors as stewardesses and passengers en route to the Great Beyond. —Variety

Director

Original

Raúl Ruiz

Raúl Ruiz: Blind Man’s Bluff

Chilean filmmaker Raúl, or Raoul, Ruiz (1941-2011) was one of the most exciting and innovative filmmakers to emerge from 1960s World Cinema, providing more intellectual fun and artistic experimentation, shot for shot, than any filmmaker since Jean-Luc Godard. A guerrilla who uncompromisingly assaulted the preconceptions of film art, this frightfully prolific figure – he made over 100 films in 40 years – did not adhere to any one style of filmmaking. He worked in 35mm, 16mm and video, for theatrical release and for European TV, and on documentary and fiction features and shorts. His career began in avant-garde theatre where, between 1956 and 1962, he wrote over 100 plays. Although he never directed any of these productions, he did dabble in TV and filmmaking in the early 1960s. In 1968, with the release of his first completed feature, the Cassavetes-like Tres tristes tigres (1968… read more

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