turkmenistan

Shadow of the Holy Book (Pyhän kirjan varjo)

Shadow of the Holy Book (Pyhän kirjan varjo) (2007, Director: Arto Halonen): I read about this film when it played at IDFA in Amsterdam and was so intrigued by the premise, I emailed Hot Docs pro­grammer Sean Farnel imme­di­ately to ask him to bring it to Hot Docs. He emailed me back to say that he and the dir­ector had been drinking vodka the night before and that it would likely be screening here. What had me so excited? Here’s the premise: Turkmenistan is a central Asian country with huge reserves of oil and nat­ural gas. It’s also one of the most repressive dic­tat­or­ships in the world. After ruling since 1985, dic­tator Saparmurat Niyazov declared him­self “President for Life” in 1999 and pub­lished a book called the Ruhnama in 2001. Turkmens are over­whelm­ingly Muslim, but Niyazov placed the Ruhnama above the Koran as a holy book and required all cit­izens to study it. So far, so bizarre, right? But the really inter­esting thing is that the film­maker found that for­eign cor­por­a­tions doing busi­ness in Turkmenistan had gained favour by “spon­soring” trans­la­tions of the book into their own lan­guages and by oth­er­wise pro­moting Niyazov’s strange cult of per­son­ality. At least, that’s how they por­trayed them­selves to Niyazov. In reality, the com­panies kept all of this quiet in their own coun­tries, not wanting to be seen as bribing a dic­tator just to gain luc­rative contracts.

Despite the fas­cin­ating concept of exposing cor­porate mis­chief in a strange and repressive country, the film frus­trated me at every turn. Finnish dir­ector Halonen enlists the help of American journ­alist Kevin Frazier and the two make an odd couple. The dour Finn and the nebbishy American with the slight lisp set out to con­tact many of the cor­porate vil­lains but are hope­lessly inept. Much of the film’s run­ning time is footage of the two of them in hotel rooms in various cities failing to get through to the right cor­porate con­tacts. As well, the use of sev­eral tacky sound effects (a cash register “cha-ching” each time a corporation’s profits are men­tioned, a type­writer intro­du­cing every on-screen title) drove me to dis­trac­tion very quickly. By the time the film­makers arrive in America to track down exec­ut­ives from Caterpillar and John Deere, the film enters Michael Moore ter­ritory, except without any of Moore’s (debat­able) cha­risma. One baff­ling Moore-like stunt has Frazier reading Ruhnama excerpts on the New York City subway, after refer­ring to America’s con­sti­tu­tional right to freedom of speech.

Overall, the travelogue approach wears thin pretty early. More prom­ising were inter­views with some Turkmen human-rights act­iv­ists and polit­ical dis­sid­ents. Unfortunately, though, far too much use is made of some crude Flash anim­a­tions cre­ated by the son of one of the act­iv­ists. By the end of the film, we realize that the pair have not been able to put together a single sub­stan­tial inter­view. Though they do get to travel to Turkmenistan on two occa­sions, they have to film clandes­tinely and are really only able to show us some of the massive con­struc­tion pro­jects awarded to the for­eign firms. We learn later that the numerous English-language Turkmen “news­casts” and Ruhnama “reading circles” were re-creations.

There were some important alleg­a­tions uncovered by the film, and some brave and dan­gerous under­cover work was per­formed by a Finnish dip­lomat. Hopefully, some of the material uncovered in the film will lead to changes in cor­porate beha­viour. But as a doc­u­mentary film, I think Shadow of the Holy Book is a bit of a missed opportunity.

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Arto Halonen and writer Kevin Frazier from after the screening:

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Duration: 16:36

Official site for the film
Trailer
Freedom for Sale, estab­lished by the dir­ectors to focus atten­tion on human rights and free speech issues in dif­ferent coun­tries, starting with Turkmenistan.

6/10(6/10)

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