Posts Tagged ‘FORUM’

Fwends (2025) Caligari Film Prize | Berlinale 2025

 

Dir: Sophie Somerville | Cast: Melissa Gan, Emmanuelle Mattana | Australia Comedy drama. 97’

A magnificent example of how an unscripted conversation can flow quite naturally between two young Gen Z women enjoying a carefree way of life in Melbourne Australia.

Em has travelled from Sydney to visit her friend Jessie here. They don’t have any particular plans – but like all close friends the conversation flows and feels so natural.

Both of them are rather footloose in their lives: Em because her supposed dream job is not what she thought it would be in the male orientated world where her woman boss is not easy either. Jessie has just split up with her boyfriend Jason, so the two mates cling to each other in a laid back way their flip smalltalk revealing more gravity than they would admit to.

Fwends breaches the divide between the fancy free existence of youth and the more sober side of adulthood. Improvisational and largely narrative-free the feature floats along pleasingly, as we tune into the subtext of the girls’ reality. 

Putting a light-hearted often humorous spin on serious issues: work and job interviews, parents, relationships – even kids – we gradually get the measure of them..

Freewheeling through the gloriously leafy city of Melbourne their chat is enlightening, amusing and very much reflects the English language in in terms of inflection and vocabulary typical of 21st century youth. Interpolations such as ‘like’ feature heavily with the ubiquitous ‘so’ beginning many sentences. Fwends is engaging despite some slackness in the mid-section.

Breezily filmed with some neon-infused nightscapes, Fwends also serves as a informative visual travelogue of Melbourne in springtime . @MeredithTaylor

BERLINALE | FORUM 2025

Terra que marca (2022) Berlinale | Forum 2022

Dir: Raul Domingues | Portugal, Doc, 66′

I often wonder why some indie filmmakers stumble with such convolutedly arcane ideas when less is always so much more. With a strong story and a beautiful way of presenting it the rest will soon fall into place as Raul Domingues illustrates with his enchanting debut feature, an ethnographical portrait of nature entitled Terra Que Marca (Striking Land). 

The affirmative circle of life goes on year after year in a small corner of rural Portugal where two people develop an ongoing relationship with nature transforming a barren plot of land in Casal da Quinta into a gift that keeps on giving, cumulatively, as the years roll by.

 

It’s often said that people don’t own the land – it owns them. And that’s true. People return year after year to places that draw them in to an emotional bond that strengthens as time progresses. Domingues bases his narrative on a fable relating to a piece of land that came into his family generations ago and perpetuate a feeling that this land must be nurtured and cared for.

Time is of the essence and Domingues is in no hurry to tell his story dictated by the rhythms of nature, he creates a perfectly balanced structure. Senses, images and sounds blend as the year unfolds from Autumn right through to the end of the second year where the burning down of vegetation provides the ash and minerals to fertilise the loamy soil for the next year’s growth, helped along by a healthy presence of earthworms to mix and aerate the earth.  

Soon the robin redbreast makes his appearance along with some sheep and a clutch of chickens, all taking part in this thriving ecosystem. Grass grows, beans, apples and corn on the cob will flourish along with courgettes, barley, potatoes and maize for bread and polenta. Flowers in the shape of lilies, mallow and roses play their part, producing the pollen for the bees to do their stuff and the season draws to a close again as the orange trees yield a bumper crop weighing down the branches almost to the ground as they multiply in the following autumn.  

Relying on an ambient soundscape, Domingues acts as his own DoP and editor in this magical meditation on the comforting power of nature. MT

BERLINALE FILM FESTIVAL 2022 | FORUM STRAND

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