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Present imperfect: Geoffrey O'Brien on The Man Without a Past. (Film).


"MY HEAD'S DAMAGED somehow. I don't even remember who I am."

My, that's bad. Care for a cup of coffee?"

This snatch of dialogue sums up quite well the clipped and unflappable tone of Finnish filmmaker Aki Kaurismaki's sixteenth feature, The Man Without a Past, a movie where, within the first three minutes, the worst has already happened: After a few tranquil establishing shots just detailed enough to let us surmise that a stranger is arriving in a city by train, the unknown man whose acquaintance we have only just made sits on a bench and without a pause is accosted ac·cost  
tr.v. ac·cost·ed, ac·cost·ing, ac·costs
1. To approach and speak to boldly or aggressively, as with a demand or request.

2. To solicit for sex.
 by skinheads Noun 1. skinheads - a youth subculture that appeared first in England in the late 1960s as a working-class reaction to the hippies; hair was cropped close to the scalp; wore work-shirts and short jeans (supported by suspenders) and heavy red boots; involved in attacks , who knock him down, beat him savagely, and leave him for dead.

We encounter him next as a bandaged near-mummy in a hospital ward, his death already confirmed by a none-too-attentive doctor on night duty. Tearing loose from the plastic tubes attached to him, the bemused patient lurches Boris Karloff-style into the unknown, finding his way to the seaside, where he will be once again despoiled--his boots stolen by a tramp--so that he can begin anew from the bottom: a postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al  
adj.
Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows.

Adj. 1.
 Kaspar Hauser without a name or a memory or a possession, dependent on the generosity of those who themselves scarcely have anything.

The events unfold with the generic, parable-like cadence of certain classic films of the silent period--The immigrant (1917) or The Outlaw and His Wife (1918) or The Docks of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
(1928)--a quality endangered from the moment movies started talking. Indeed, one of Kaurismaki's recent films, Juha (1999), was a literal attempt to revive silent melodrama. In The Man Without a Past it is as if we were going to begin from zero, aesthetically and in every other way, in a shantytown shan·ty·town  
n.
A town or a section of a town consisting chiefly of shacks.


shantytown
Noun

a town of poor people living in shanties

Noun 1.
 by an industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 river, in a world constructed out of debris, fed by evangelical soup kitchens, and entertained by accordion-playing fringe-dwellers, a world where as a matter of course every bucket has a hole in it. Story persists in a robustly tentative fashion: The fact that merely getting fed and finding shelter are such epic undertakings leaves relatively little room for narrative complication. The simplest things--working out a deal to sublet sub·let  
tr.v. sub·let, sub·let·ting, sub·lets
1. To rent (property one holds by lease) to another.

2. To subcontract (work).

n.
 a derelict shipping container from a night watchman WATCHMAN. An officer in many cities and towns, whose duty it is to watch during the night and take care of the property of the inhabitants.
     2. He possesses generally the common law authority of a constable (q.v.
, registering with the local une mployment office--take long enough that impatience is no longer part of the vocabulary. It's hard to be impatient when everything is happening for the first time.

A quick exchange of glances with a Salvation Army officer--the weathered, vulnerable Kati Outinen, Ophelia in Kaurismaki's memorably depoeticized Hamlet Goes Business (1987)--is nothing less than love at first sight. (The Salvation Army atmosphere is tuned so precisely that you can practically smell the mothballs in the back room where they store the donated suits.) The salvaging of a discarded jukebox, conveniently stocked with magnificent blues and rockabilly records, becomes the means of introducing rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music.  to an earnest evangelical combo (guitar, bass, and parade drum) whose tentative foot-tapping on their first encounter with the Big Beat is registered with great comic delicacy. Before long the evangelicals are regaling their audience of homeless drifters with a homemade brand of apocalyptic rock 'n' roll: "I'm haunted by the devil, every day and every night Every Day and Every Night is the third record and the first EP by Nebraskan indie rock band Bright Eyes. It became the 30th release by Saddle Creek Records on November 1, 1999. ." The scene, brief as it is, ranks among the great rock numbers on film.

Kaurismaki's films are often, with good reason, described as "deadpan"; they reinforce an impression of Finland as a place where cracking a smile is unheard of. His characters--whether preachers, bums, government bureaucrats, amateur bank robbers, or dissatisfied housewives--discuss the pros and cons pros and cons
Noun, pl

the advantages and disadvantages of a situation [Latin pro for + con(tra) against]
 of their various existential dilemmas in the same low, measured tones, and with the same poker-faced demeanor: They will never burst into the screams or moans or maniacal ma·ni·a·cal or ma·ni·ac
adj.
Suggestive of or afflicted with insanity.
 laughter that some situations seem to call for, not even if they're locked in a bank vault and the oxygen is slowly being depleted de·plete  
tr.v. de·plet·ed, de·plet·ing, de·pletes
To decrease the fullness of; use up or empty out.



[Latin d
. If social institutions like welfare offices and police departments and industrial personnel divisions seem to serve more as obstructions or occlusions--especially since not having a name makes government assistance all but impossible--the response will not be violent resistance but a discreet sidling away into the more anonymous spaces appreciated by drunkards, wanderers, and musicians.

The story goes somewhere because it must, even if the resolution is so unsatisfying to the central character (forever nameless) that he turns his back on it and walks, as it were, back into the picture's opening reels. Having found his identity, he is quick to discard it again, finding his way to that marginal zone of rusted metal and cracked concrete where identities are still permitted to remain undefined--and free from bureaucratic paperwork. "Can't you pay me in cash like the old days?" he had asked earlier on, while still trying to find a way back into the system he was knocked out of. The film's distinct landscape--a landscape without monuments other than the expressions of more or less eroded faces, above all that of the lead actor, Markku Peltola--suggests a continent without a past, a place at the water's edge where history dissolves into mere survival. Like the silent movies whose mood it evokes, The Man Without a Past stays fixed inescapably on the present moment.

Geoffrey O'Brien is editor in chief of the Library of America The Library of America (LoA) is a nonprofit publisher of classic American literature. Overview and history
Founded in 1979 with seed money from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Ford Foundation, the LoA has published more than 150 volumes by a wide range
.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:O'Brien, Geoffrey
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Movie Review
Date:May 1, 2003
Words:875
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