Marcel Odenbach: Buchmann Galerie.In the late '30s, Russian poet Anna Akhmatova Anna Akhmatova (Russian: А́нна Ахма́това, real name А́нна Андре́евна spent countless days and nights in front of a prison's gates in Leningrad, waiting in the freezing cold to see if her son Lev lev-, pref See levo-. Gumilyov was even alive. Another woman there asked: Could one ever describe this? I can, replied Akhmatova, and she soon began writing "Requiem requiem (rĕk`wēəm, rē`–, rā`–) [Lat.,=rest], proper Mass for the souls of the dead, performed on All Souls' Day and at funerals. ," one of the most shattering testimonials in world literature. Marcel Odenbach, noticing in Rwandans introverted in·tro·vert·ed adj. Marked by interest in or preoccupation with oneself or one's own thoughts as opposed to others or the environment. behavior uncharacteristic un·char·ac·ter·is·tic adj. Unusual or atypical: an uncharacteristic display of anger. un of Africans, began to wonder whether this was perhaps a consequence of the 1994 genocide. Later, working in the film archives at the United Nations, he came across documentary footage from the disaster. Greatly disturbed by the images, he was seized by the idea of transposing the unspeakable events in Rwanda into a film. But how? The result is a thirty-one-minute double projection titled In stillen Teichen lauern Krokodile (In Still Waters Crocodiles Lurk To view the interaction in a chat room or online forum without participating by typing in any comments. See de-lurk. lurk - lurking ), 2004, shown here for the first time. Odenbach is not concerned so much with a reconstruction of the genocide, or even with showing its horrors, as he is with its psychological consequences: How can such traumatic experiences be overcome? Is it possible for perpetrators and victims to then live together in the same society? This concern is suggested in the opening credits Opening credits, in a television program, motion picture or videogame, are shown at the beginning of a show and list the most important members of the production. They are usually shown as text superimposed on a blank screen or static pictures, or sometimes on top of action in the of the film, which, in a reference to Ingmar Bergman's Persona (1966), shows a rolling film projector. Bergman's film, on which the whole opening of Odenbach's is based, deals with the traumatic dream of a child; in Rwanda, the children of the victims as well as of the perpetrators are "sentenced" to living on. Odenbach divides his film into seven "chapters," with titles such as "When God lies down to sleep, he rests his head toward Rwanda," "A drum is mightier than the cry," "A nightmare becomes true," and, finally, "When will God go to sleep again in Rwanda?" Each chapter has its own rhythm, intensifying from one to the next. Peaceful landscapes; scenes from the history of Rwanda This article discusses the history of Rwanda. Early history
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] For Odenbach, this film increasingly became a work about his past. Having grown up in postwar Germany among victims and perpetrators, he saw parallels to his own childhood: the silence, the self-imposed isolation of others, the curtains drawn shut in the windows, the inability of children to cry out loud. And so it is definitely also his personal story that he tells in the piece. "Isn't storytelling always a way of searching for one's origin, speaking one's conflict with the Law, entering into the dialectic of tenderness and hatred?" Roland Barthes Roland Barthes (November 12, 1915 – March 25, 1980) (pronounced [ʀɔlɑ̃ baʀt]) was a French literary critic, literary and social theorist, philosopher, and semiologist. once asked. The film ends as it begins, with a reference to Persona. A boy haltingly raises his little hand and strokes his mother's face, projected bigger than life on the wall: a moving picture. "I can forget the images but never the smell," Odenbach wrote in his diary of Rwanda--thus the title of the fifth chapter. But no one who sees this film will forget its images. --Noemi Smolik Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
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