estonia

EstDocs Estonian Documentary Film Festival in Toronto

Celebrating 20 years of Estonian inde­pend­ence, this year’s EstDocs will fea­ture a spe­cial focus on films that revisit that small country’s struggle against the powerful Soviet state. Now in its sev­enth year, EstDocs will run from October 14–18, screening 12 films (10 with English sub­titles). Of par­tic­ular interest is a rare screening of the newly-restored Year of the Dragon (Draakoni Aasta), ori­gin­ally filmed in 1988, a year of demo­cratic awakening in Estonia. Quarter-million-strong all night song vigils led to a cour­ageous declar­a­tion of Estonian sov­er­eignty and to even­tual inde­pend­ence as the Soviet Union col­lapsed. This will cer­tainly be an emo­tional screening for mem­bers of Toronto’s Estonian com­munity and would be a great way to dis­cover the pas­sion and unquench­able pat­ri­otism of the Estonian people. Here’s a still from the film:

Year of the Dragon (Draakoni Aasta) [still]

Most screen­ings take place at Tartu College (310 Bloor St. West) and tickets are avail­able at the door. Full pro­gram inform­a­tion avail­able at the EstDocs web­site.

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European Union Film Festival 2010

Finally ditching the goofy name (it was pre­vi­ously known as the Eh! U European Film Festival), the European Union Film Festival returns for its sixth edi­tion from November 18th through the 30th at the Royal Cinema. Featuring 21 films from 21 European coun­tries, the fest­ival offers free admis­sion to all films thanks to the sup­port of the various con­su­lates who coordinate the fest­ival each year.

What I love most about this fest­ival, other than the free tickets, is its demo­cratic nature. Each country may only be rep­res­ented by one film, so the usual behemoths of European cinema (France, Italy, Germany, Denmark, Spain) are on a level playing field with the smaller coun­tries (Cyprus, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovenia) whose cinema we rarely get a chance to see. Last year fea­tured six films that were offi­cial sub­mis­sions for the Best Foreign Film Award at the Oscars, and although this year fea­tures fewer high-profile films, it prom­ises more dis­cov­eries. Not many of these films have played yet in Toronto, and most likely won’t return, so don’t miss your chance to see what’s hap­pening in some of the less glam­orous corners of European cinema. The price is cer­tainly right. Here are a few highlights:

Les Barons

Thursday November 18, 8:30pm — Les Barons (Belgium, 2009, Director: Nabil Ben Yadir): A group of working-class bud­dies in a Brussels neigh­bour­hood cel­eb­rate idle­ness and the good life, des­pite the dis­ap­proval of the older gen­er­a­tion. I missed this when it played at CineFranco earlier this year, but it looks like a charming comedy set amongst the north African com­munity in the New Europe.

Disco and Atomic War

Saturday November 20, 6:00pm — Disco and Atomic War (Estonia, 2009, Director: Jaak Kilmi): This doc­u­mentary played at Hot Docs this past spring and I’ve heard great things. It’s a slyly comic essay film that explores the hypo­thesis that Finnish TV broad­casts of American shows that reached Estonia during the 1980s helped bring down the Communist system of the USSR.

Landscape No. 2

Thursday November 25, 6:00pm — Landscape No. 2 (Slovenia, 2008, Director: Vinko Möderndorfer): A simple art theft turns into some­thing more sin­ister when the burg­lars also steal a valu­able doc­u­ment from the end of World War II. This was Slovenia’s Oscar sub­mis­sion for 2009.

Be sure to explore the fest­ival web site for more inform­a­tion. The best way to show that Toronto appre­ci­ates European film is to make an effort to see it. Free admis­sion means you have no excuse!

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EstDocs 2010

If you know me at all, you know that I have a spe­cial place in my heart for small coun­tries. But oppor­tun­ities to see cinema from the smaller nations can be rare. Not so with tiny Estonia. This nation of just over a mil­lion inhab­it­ants has been for­tu­nate to screen its cinema at local fest­ivals such as the European Union Film Festival. What you might not know is that Estonia has a ded­ic­ated doc­u­mentary film fest­ival as well that is now in its fifth year. Estdocs takes place from October 15–22 at sev­eral venues around town. While Estonia remains near the top of my to-visit list, I might not be able to make it for a few years, so learning about Estonian cul­ture through film is great preparation.

The opening film is the charming World Champion (Maailmameister), about 83-year-old pole vaulter Herbert Sepp. If you enjoyed Autumn Gold (Herbstgold) (review) at this year’s Hot Docs, you’re bound to enjoy this one, too.

And the fest­ival closes next Friday night with a spe­cial present­a­tion by John Ralston Saul on the dis­ap­pear­ance of lan­guages. Finno-Ugaric lan­guages, of which Estonian is one, are dis­ap­pearing rap­idly. What does this mean for the cul­ture of a small and proud country like Estonia? Come and find out.

Tickets and more inform­a­tion are avail­able through the EstDocs site as well as from the Estonian Foundation of Canada.

Check out their Facebook page, too!

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The Singing Revolution
Editor’s Note: I have to make par­tic­ular men­tion of the film’s excel­lent and com­pre­hensive web site. The dir­ectors have done a great job using the web to gen­erate interest and obtain screening dates in cities across North America. As a result of audi­ence interest expressed on the web site, the film will open in Toronto on April 25th and play until May 1st (with a pos­sible exten­sion depending on ticket sales) at the Carlton Cinema. Check the link the week before for showtimes.

The Singing Revolution (2006, Directors: James Tusty and Maureen Castle Tusty): My wife and I are big fans of small coun­tries. We will visit Iceland this fall and have taken hol­i­days in Cuba, Slovenia and Uruguay in the past few years. There’s some­thing inspiring about the indom­it­ab­ility of small nations, espe­cially if they’ve been force­fully occu­pied or dom­in­ated by other coun­tries. Estonia cer­tainly fits the bill, and my dream trip is to one day spend a week each in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. James Tusty and Maureen Castle Tusty are a hus­band and wife team who have doc­u­mented the unique struggle of Estonia to emerge from the Soviet Union as an inde­pendent nation, and they’ve cre­ated a won­derful film.

For most of its his­tory, Estonia has been dom­in­ated by much larger coun­tries, and the 20th cen­tury was par­tic­u­larly cruel. This country of just over a mil­lion gained its inde­pend­ence in 1920 only to be invaded by the Soviet Union in 1939. As World War II raged, Hitler’s armies occu­pied Estonia as part of their inva­sion of the Soviet Union, and so there was another for­eign occu­pier. By 1944, though, the Nazis had been expelled by the resur­gent Red Army and for the better part of the next half-century, Estonia was occu­pied by Soviet troops and for­cibly integ­rated into the USSR. But Estonia also had a very strong cul­tural tra­di­tion of folk singing, and des­pite its small size, pos­sesses one of the largest col­lec­tions of folk songs in the world. Every five years since 1869, a huge folk singing fest­ival called Laulupidu was held in the uni­ver­sity town of Tartu. At these events, huge choirs of 25,000–30,000 would sing on stage at the same time, expressing their unity and pride in their national iden­tity. During the Soviet occu­pa­tion, these fest­ivals were prac­tic­ally the only allowed outlet for Estonian cul­ture, des­pite being, for the most part co-opted to pro­mote Communist ideas. At the end of the offi­cial pro­gram (Communist songs sung in Russian), the choirs were allowed to sing three or four songs in Estonian. At the 1947 fest­ival, Estonian com­poser Gustav Ernasaks presented a new song he’d written based on a century-old Estonian poem. “Mu isamaa on minu arm” (“Land of My Fathers, Land That I Love”) became the unof­fi­cial Estonian national anthem and was sung lustily by the crowds at each fest­ival. In 1969, at the centen­nial of the fest­ival, the Soviet author­ities banned it, but the crowds spon­tan­eously took it up and sang it sev­eral times. It’s clear how much singing and this fest­ival meant to the Estonian national identity.

When Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985 with his policies of “glas­nost” and “peres­troika”, the Estonians saw their chance to reclaim their cul­ture and their inde­pend­ence. Political dis­sid­ents used music to inspire protest, and by 1991, Estonia had declared inde­pend­ence. Unlike its Baltic neigh­bours Latvia and Lithuania, there was no viol­ence des­pite the threat of Soviet retali­ation. The Estonian char­acter values patience. As nar­rator Linda Hunt expresses it, “patience is a weapon, cau­tion, a virtue.” Because of their small size, the Estonian res­ist­ance knew it could never tri­umph by force, and so they care­fully nav­ig­ated a very del­icate pro­cess and achieved a prac­tic­ally blood­less vic­tory. The film does a good job of doc­u­menting these amazing and tension-filled days.

Today, Estonia is a thriving demo­cracy, a member of NATO and the European Union. The music fest­ival con­tinues, and for those who were involved in this still-fresh revolu­tion, it is a place to share their memories with their chil­dren. And of course to sing “Mu isamaa on minu arm”, loudly and without fear.

If I have one small cri­ti­cism of the film, it would be its micro­scopic focus on Estonia to the exclu­sion of the other Baltic Republics. There are a few tan­tal­izing men­tions of events going on in Latvia and Lithuania (in par­tic­ular, a protest where cit­izens of all three coun­tries joined hands and cre­ated a 600km long human chain to protest the Soviet occu­pa­tion), but it would have been enlight­ening to see in more detail how these three small coun­tries worked together to take on the entire Soviet Union. Three dis­tinct cul­tures, yes, but also three neces­sary allies. Perhaps that story will have to wait for my own trip.

Official Site
Trailer

8/10(8/10)

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