Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Sailcloth

by James McNally on February 7, 2012 · 1 comment

in Shorts

Sailcloth
SPOILER ALERT: I usu­ally don’t make a point of alerting readers to spoilers, but it’s pretty hard not to in writing about this film. At just 18 minutes, though, you figure out pretty quickly what’s going on. Nonetheless, fair warning.

Sailcloth (Director: Elfar Adelsteins): John Hurt stars in this word­less tale of a man who stages a “jail­break” from his sea­side retire­ment home, steals a sail­boat, and takes con­trol of his des­tiny. Icelandic-born dir­ector Adelsteins ded­ic­ated the film to the memory of his own grand­father, the cir­cum­stances of whose death I have no know­ledge of, but I do sus­pect that like most Icelanders, the sea was an important part of his life.

Hurt has always been one of my favourite actors, and his deeply-lined face is even more expressive than usual, con­sid­ering it has to do all the dra­matic work here. There’s an imp­ish­ness about his escape that ini­tially had me won­dering if this was just to be a boyish lark, but we soon come to know that his prank has a more grave pur­pose, and that this journey is to be his last. And that dis­ap­pointed me, because I feel like I’ve seen too many of these sorts of stories lately, of older people “taking back” their sense of agency over their fates. I sup­pose the dir­ector would argue that this is about dig­nity, but somehow it feels like we’re being told it’s heroic for older people to take their own lives.

My dis­com­fort with the theme doesn’t make the film any less riv­eting. Hurt is excel­lent, and the cine­ma­to­graphy is lush, with an excel­lent focus on details. It cer­tainly con­veys the freedom and joy of being out in a sail­boat on a sunny day. However, I do have an issue with the music, whose syrupy sen­ti­ment­ality is simply unne­ces­sary. Hurt’s per­form­ance does all the work here, and doesn’t need boosting of any kind. For me the most affecting scene is when, enjoying the sea and the sun, he looks out toward the open sea and has to choose: will I steer toward the horizon or let the horizon come to me? As in many short films, the meta­phor­ical weight can be crushing, but Hurt never over­plays things.

Sailcloth was short­l­isted for an Oscar® in the cat­egory of live-action short, but in the end did not make the final list of five nom­inees. Nevertheless, I hope that more people will have the chance to see Hurt’s per­form­ance. And des­pite my reser­va­tions, I look for­ward to seeing the devel­op­ment of Elfar Adelsteins as a film­maker. This is only his second short film, and reading about his work with other Icelandic film­makers like Valdís Óskarsdóttir and Friðrik Þór Friðriksson, I am sure he has a bright future.

Official Facebook page of the film

{ Comments on this entry are closed }