previously published on Cineuropa
Daniel Spoerri
is a Swiss multidisciplinary artist best known for his work in the
realm of visual arts, and as the driving force behind the New
Realism, Fluxus and Eat Art movements. During his long and fruitful
life (he was born in 1930 and is still alive and active), he has also
written poetry, and has been a professional ballet dancer,
avant-garde theatre director and experimental filmmaker. He is the
principal subject of Anja Salomonowitz's latest
documentary, This Movie Is a Gift, which had its festival
premiere at the Viennale.
It is an unusual piece
of documentary filmmaking, and this is evident right from the start.
Salomonowitz is also present as one of the narrators and active
characters, stating her intentions directly into the microphone. She
opens the movie with the full version of Spoerri's own short film
Resurrection (1969), which examines one of his life-long
preoccupations, the cycle of life, but backwards.
Only after the short
film, which takes up eight minutes of the total 72-minute running
time, does she proceed to the opening credits and the introduction of
her characters and subjects. First up is the director's own son,
Oskar, who breaks the ice with a joke before taking
on the roles of a narrator who recounts Spoerri's childhood memories
and a student-type character interested in the artist's work. This
kind of gimmick might seem tasteless, but it works well here for
several reasons, one of them being Oskar's seemingly genuine interest
in Spoerri's work, the technique and the logic behind it, as well as
the laid-back interaction between the two in a couple of scenes later
on. Another reason is Spoerri's commanding presence both when he
talks about his art and when he reflects on his childhood as a
secular Jewish boy in fascist Romania and as his father's unloved
son, with the wisdom and the attitude of an experienced older man and
a complete lack of sentimentality that complements Oskar's unforced
naivety.
Salomonowitz's presence
is as the active narrator explaining her motivations for making a
film about Spoerri and creating it as a gift to him. In this way, she
wishes to repay him for a gift he gave her, a work of art centring
around an object that belonged to her recently deceased father. Both
the artist-subject and the filmmaker are defined by the relationships
they had with their fathers, though these are completely different in
nature.
The director’s frank
storytelling approach is matched precisely by the filmmaking style
she goes for. The delicate and logical balance that is struck between
the static and hand-held shots by Martin Putz, the
straightforward but off-kilter sound design by Veronika
Hlawatsch underlined by Bernhard Fleischmann's
gentle score dominated by a piano over an electronic loop, and the
clean jump cuts thanks to Eleonora Camizzi and Petra
Zöpnek's editing make This Movie Is a Gift a
pleasant watch and a worthy gift indeed, both to Daniel Spoerri and
to the audience.
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