mesnalty wrote: ↑Thu Jun 25, 2020 1:15 am
Beduino (Julio Bressane)
this one definitely threw me for a loop - it's always challenging jumping into late career work from artist with a huge body of work, but this is a pretty imposing example of late style, where the language seems to be moving towards something strange and almost private, a feeling that only intensifies as footage and references to bressane's own 1971 film memories of a blonde strangler (sadly unavailable at all online) start to dominate the final sections.
could be very much off here but feels like experimental film in the most literal sense, the stage set becoming a kind of a workshop where bressane can play with different strategies, games, scenes, with connection tissue between gestures seemingly as much a matter to texture and association as anything else (although it's totally possible i'm missing pieces here). the actors, especially alessandra negrini, are very good here, brining a lot of weight and humor to what has to be a difficult role to play. self-parody always seems within easy reach; i think it took me more than halfway through the film before i felt comfortable with the whole thing, if that makes any sense.
will go back and look at more of his work, and probably revisit this when i feel like i have a little firmer grasp on what he's doing.