Film Review
Va, vis et deviens is the
third full-length film from Radu Mihaileanu, an ambitious
semi-autobiographical work that explores issues of race and identity
through the traumatic experiences of a displaced African refugee.
As in Mihaileanu's impressive previous films,
Trahir (1993) and
Train
de vie (1998), this film paints a portrait of intense
personal experience against a grand historical backdrop, and so has a
sense of both the epic and the intimate. Unfortunately, as in
these earlier films, Mihaileanu has a habit of sometimes being too
preachy, too demonstrative, in a way that undermines the film's
realism and emotional impact. Too many shots of tear-stained faces, too many obvious
clichés...
With a runtime of almost two and half hours, the film is also way too
long for the story it has too tell. This would be less
of a problem if it weren't for the fact that it also feels somewhat
uneven and aimless, with no clear underlying message to guide or reward the
spectator. The first half of the film is quite compelling,
with a truthful depiction of the child's Schlomo painful experiences in
his adopted country, but then the focus dissolves and viewer-interest wanes as Schlomo moves
into adolescence and early adulthood. The film does have some strengths, however.
It is generally well-scripted, beautifully shot and has a number of
sequences - such as the opening shots in the refugee camps - that are
extraordinarily potent and leave a lasting impression. If only
the narrative were a little tighter and bled of its occasional slips
into awkward sentimentality, this would have been a much greater
film.
© James Travers 2008
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Film Synopsis
In 1984, a humanitarian crisis descends on the Sudan as thousands of
Africans fleeing famine swell the make-shift camps. Israel and
the United States launch a vast operation to expatriate several
thousand Jewish Ethiopians to Israel. One of the evacuees is nine
year old Schlomo, whose Christian mother stayed behind after putting
him in the care of another woman. When this woman dies shortly
after their arrival in Israel, Schlomo is adopted by a young family in
Tel-Aviv. As he grows up, Schlomo not only has to reconcile
himself with his confused past and the memory of a mother he may never
see again, but he must also make some sense of the fractured world
around him, a world of extreme racism and interminable religious hatred...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.