Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The Precinct

by James McNally on December 28, 2010

in Awards,Oscars,Screeners

The Precinct

The Precinct (Director: Ilgar Safat): A few weeks ago, I received an email from a Hollywood-based pub­li­cist. I get lots of these sorts of emails, but this one was a bit dif­ferent. How would I like to review Azerbaijan’s sub­mis­sion to the Best Foreign Film cat­egory for this year’s Academy Awards? That’s just the sort of unusual pitch to which I’m likely to respond, so I said sure.

Garib is a pho­to­grapher of erotic nudes working in Baku, the cap­ital of Azerbaijan. His fiancée Sabina is get­ting a bit tired of waiting for Garib to finally settle down and marry her. During an excur­sion to the pic­tur­esque cliffs of Gobustan, he informs her he’ll be leaving again for sev­eral months to work in Africa. They argue during the car ride back and Garib loses con­trol of the car. Fortunately, two police officers come by and pull them from the burning wreck. Instead of of taking them to hos­pital, though, the policemen bring them back to their isol­ated pre­cinct, where their very creepy superior sub­mits Garib to some very probing ques­tions about his past.

Suddenly the film flashes back to Garib’s youth. We learn how he dis­covers a love for pho­to­graphy but also how that interest is used against him by local gang­sters. When a box of old neg­at­ives washes up on shore, some local thugs force Garib to print them at the studio of his beloved pho­to­graphy teacher. When the images turn out to be por­no­graphic, Garib is forced to keep printing them while the thugs sell the prints. After this racket is dis­covered and broken up by the local Communist author­ities, the thugs force Garib to take por­no­graphic photos of Alina, a local girl who’s been turning tricks to sup­port her young brother. Since Garib has been secretly in love with Alina, this drives him to attempt sui­cide. But when he tries to hang him­self, the rope breaks and he’s res­cued by two policemen. Curiously, they are the same two policemen we have seen earlier in the film.

When the film snaps back to the present, Garib seems to under­stand what the pre­cinct is. When the officers throw him into a burning cell, he real­izes he’s in a sort of pur­gatory. Suddenly, he comes to in the burning car with the sound of the approaching police car in his ears.

It’s a fairly ambi­tious struc­ture, although I found the framing story, for all its Kafkaesque atmo­sphere, pretty easy to figure out. The com­bin­a­tion of spiritual/psychological menace is clearly meant to force Garib to con­front some­thing from his past, hence the flash­back. The middle sec­tion of the film is the strongest, keeping to a nat­ur­al­istic tone and shed­ding light on the his­tory of pho­to­graphy and cinema in Azerbaijan. Although the expos­i­tion is some­times a little clumsy, I nev­er­the­less found it quite inter­esting. Visually this sec­tion is strongest as well, for we travel with young Garib all over his child­hood vil­lage and are not con­fined to the dark precinct.

Performances are good, although there’s not really much in terms of char­acter devel­op­ment. Garib learns his lesson but it’s only clear from the flash­back and flash­for­ward. Within the pre­cinct, the per­form­ances are pitched a little high, to match the eeri­ness of the situ­ation. Overall, the film was enter­taining without being excep­tional. This is the first Azeri film I’ve ever seen, and I was impressed with the pro­duc­tion values for the most part. But I think would have been hap­pier to see a film based entirely on Garib’s child­hood rather than trying to graft that coming-of-age story onto a more genre-based psychological/horror story.

6/10(6/10)

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I’m very pleased to announce the res­ults of the inaug­ural CAST Awards. If you’ll pardon the pun, I “cast” a fairly wide net among my cinephile friends and am pleased with the level of par­ti­cip­a­tion. I received 31 com­pleted bal­lots from film lovers in the Greater Toronto Area. Here are the CAST Top 25 voted on from a pre­de­ter­mined list of just over 100 films which had the most pre­lim­inary sup­port. Voters ranked up to 25 films on their ballot from top to bottom, with first choices receiving 25 points, second choices 24, etc. The Points column lists the total score for each film, and the Mentions column indic­ates the number of bal­lots it appeared on.

FILM TITLE
POINTS
MENTIONS
1. Inception 411 22
2. Toy Story 3 311 20
3. Black Swan 307 16
4. Shutter Island 297 19
5. The Social Network 261 17
6. Scott Pilgrim 254 17
7. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo 231 16
8. Winter’s Bone 180 11
9. I Am Love 165 9
10.The King’s Speech 149 11
11. Rubber 149 9
12. Never Let Me Go 147 11
13. Trigger 140 9
14. Fish Tank 134 9
15. Buried 134 9
16. The White Ribbon 130 7
17. True Grit 127 9
18. Chloe 124 8
19. Easy A 121 10
20. Marwencol 117 7
21. 127 Hours 115 9
22. A Prophet 114 8
23. Rabbit Hole 112 7
24. Blue Valentine 110 8
25. Heartbeats 110 7

Participants:

Here is a PDF with each person’s ballot and the col­lated res­ults, with a few more inter­esting stats included.

And for those still reading, here is my final CAST ballot, ranking 25 films from the list of eli­gible films. In a future blog post, I’ll come up with my own 2010 list(s), sim­ilar to what I did last year.

My CAST Ballot

  1. NY Export: Opus Jazz (review)
  2. Incendies
  3. Marwencol (review)
  4. Never Let Me Go
  5. Black Swan
  6. Balada Triste (review)
  7. Carlos (review)
  8. Rubber
  9. Trigger
  10. Blue Valentine
  11. Inception
  12. Waste Land (review)
  13. Toy Story 3
  14. Submarine (review)
  15. The Social Network
  16. Exit Through The Gift Shop
  17. Shutter Island
  18. Meek’s Cutoff
  19. Fish Tank
  20. Inside Job (review)
  21. The King’s Speech
  22. Greenberg (review)
  23. True Grit
  24. Poetry
  25. The Misfortunates

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